Commit Graph

54571 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Johannes Schindelin
6139e044d1 git-wrapper: serve as git-gui.exe, too
To avoid that ugly Console window when calling \cmd\git.exe gui...

To avoid confusion with builtins, we need to move the code block
handling gitk (and now git-gui, too) to intercept before git-gui is
mistaken for a builtin.

Unfortunately, git-gui is in libexec/git-core/ while gitk is in bin/,
therefore we need slightly more adjustments than just moving and
augmenting the gitk case.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-04 15:32:22 +02:00
nalla
5151390784 git-wrapper: support git.exe and gitk.exe to be in a spaced dir
When *Git for Windows* is installed into a directory that has spaces in
it, e.g. `C:\Program Files\Git`, the `git-wrapper` appends this directory
unquoted when fixing up the command line. To resolve this, just quote the
provided `execpath`.

Signed-off-by: nalla <nalla@hamal.uberspace.de>
2015-10-04 15:32:22 +02:00
Johannes Schindelin
83f318249c git-wrapper: Allow git-cmd.exe to add only /cmd/ to the PATH
The idea of having the Git wrapper in the /cmd/ directory is to allow
adding only a *tiny* set of executables to the search path, to allow
minimal interference with other software applications. It is quite
likely, for example, that other software applications require their own
version of zlib1.dll and would not be overly happy to find the version
Git for Windows ships.

The /cmd/ directory also gives us the opportunity to let the Git wrapper
handle the `gitk` script. It is a Tcl/Tk script that is not recognized
by Windows, therefore calling `gitk` in `cmd.exe` would not work, even
if we add all of Git for Windows' bin/ directories.

So let's use the /cmd/ directory instead of adding /mingw??/bin/ and
/usr/bin/ to the PATH when launching Git CMD.

The way we implemented Git CMD is to embed the appropriate command line
as string resource into a copy of the Git wrapper. Therefore we extended
that syntax to allow for configuring a minimal search path.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-04 15:32:22 +02:00
Johannes Schindelin
34b68eb7c0 git-wrapper: optionally skip cd $HOME when configured via resources
We recently added the ability to configure copies of the Git wrapper to
launch custom command-lines, configured via plain old Windows resources.
The main user is Git for Windows' `git-bash.exe`, of course. When the
user double-clicks the `git bash` icon, it makes sense to start the Bash
in the user's home directory.

Third-party software, such as TortoiseGit or GitHub for Windows, may
want to start the Git Bash in another directory, though.

Now, when third-party software wants to call Git, they already have to
construct a command-line, and can easily pass a command-line option
`--no-cd` (which this commit introduces), and since that option is not
available when the user double-clicks an icon on the Desktop or in the
Explorer, let's keep the default to switch to the home directory if the
`--no-cd` flag was not passed along.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-04 15:32:22 +02:00
Johannes Schindelin
33b2560bcb git-wrapper: make command-line argument skipping more robust
When we rewrite the command-line to call the *real* Git, we want to skip
the first command-line parameter. The previous code worked in most
circumstances, but was a bit fragile because it assumed that no fancy
quoting would take place.

In the next commit, we will want to have the option to skip more than
just one command-line parameter, so we have to be much more careful with
the command-line handling.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-04 15:32:22 +02:00
Johannes Schindelin
b655067aef git-wrapper: remove 'gui' and 'citool' handling
In the meantime, Git for Windows learned to handle those subcommands
quite well itself; There is no longer a need to special-case them in the
wrapper.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-04 15:32:21 +02:00
Johannes Schindelin
efa4ee63df Let the Git wrapper replace cmd\gitk.cmd, too
In a push to polish Git for Windows more, we are moving away from
scripts toward proper binaries.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-04 15:32:21 +02:00
Johannes Schindelin
b3a12cc272 Git wrapper: allow overriding what executable is called
The Git wrapper does one thing, and does it well: setting up the
environment required to run Git and its scripts, and then hand off to
another program.

We already do this for the Git executable itself; in Git for Windows'
context, we have exactly the same need also when calling the Git Bash or
Git CMD. However, both are tied to what particular shell environment you
use, though: MSys or MSys2 (or whatever else cunning developers make
work for them). This means that the Git Bash and Git CMD need to be
compiled in the respective context (e.g. when compiling the
mingw-w64-git package in the MSys2 context).

Happily, Windows offers a way to configure compiled executables:
resources. So let's just look whether the current executable has a
string resource and use it as the command-line to execute after the
environment is set up. To support MSys2's Git Bash better (where
`mintty` should, but might not, be available), we verify whether the
specified executable exists, and keep looking for string resources if it
does not.

For even more flexibility, we expand environment variables specified as
`@@<VARIABLE-NAME>@@`, and for convenience `@@EXEPATH@@` expands into
the directory in which the executable resides.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-04 15:32:21 +02:00
Johannes Schindelin
1f8c987ac2 git-wrapper: inherit stdin/stdout/stderr even without a console
Otherwise the output of Git commands cannot be caught by, say, Git GUI
(because it is running detached from any console, which would make
`git.exe` inherit the standard handles implicitly).

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-04 15:32:21 +02:00
Johannes Schindelin
096958334f git-wrapper: prepare for executing configurable command-lines
We are about to use the Git wrapper to call the Git Bash of Git for
Windows. All the wrapper needs to do for that is to set up the
environment variables, use the home directory as working directory and
then hand off to a user-specified command-line.

We prepare the existing code for this change by introducing flags to set
up the environment variables, to launch a non-Git program, and to use
the home directory as working directory.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-04 15:32:21 +02:00
Johannes Schindelin
d5efb26439 git-wrapper: support MSys2
The original purpose of the Git wrapper is to run from inside Git for
Windows' /cmd/ directory, to allow setting up some environment variables
before Git is allowed to take over.

Due to differences in the file system layout, MSys2 requires some
changes for that to work.

In addition, we must take care to set the `MSYSTEM` environment variable
to `MINGW32` or `MINGW64`, respectively, to allow MSys2 to be configured
correctly in case Git launches a shell or Perl script.

We also need to change the `TERM` variable to `cygwin` instead of
`msys`, otherwise the pager `less.exe` (spawned e.g. by `git log`) will
simply crash with a message similar to this one:

	1 [main] less 9832 cygwin_exception::open_stackdumpfile:
	Dumping stack trace to less.exe.stackdump

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-04 15:32:20 +02:00
Johannes Schindelin
f668b83f5b mingw: Use the Git wrapper for builtins
This reduces the disk footprint of a full Git for Windows setup
dramatically because on Windows, one cannot assume that hard links are
supported.

The net savings are calculated easily: the 32-bit `git.exe` file weighs
in with 7662 kB while the `git-wrapper.exe` file (modified to serve as a
drop-in replacement for builtins) weighs a scant 21 kB. At this point,
there are 109 builtins which results in a total of 813 MB disk space
being freed up by this commit.

Yes, that is really more than half a gigabyte.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-04 15:32:20 +02:00
Johannes Schindelin
1f7ff4b62f Let the Git wrapper serve as a drop-in replacement for builtins
Git started out as a bunch of separate commands, in the true Unix spirit.
Over time, more and more functionality was shared between the different
Git commands, though, so it made sense to introduce the notion of
"builtins": programs that are actually integrated into the main Git
executable.

These builtins can be called in two ways: either by specifying a
subcommand as the first command-line argument, or -- for backwards
compatibility -- by calling the Git executable hardlinked to a filename
of the form "git-<subcommand>". Example: the "log" command can be called
via "git log <parameters>" or via "git-log <parameters>". The latter
form is actually deprecated and only supported for scripts; calling
"git-log" interactively will not even work by default because the
libexec/git-core/ directory is not in the PATH.

All of this is well and groovy as long as hard links are supported.

Sadly, this is not the case in general on Windows. So it actually hurts
quite a bit when you have to fall back to copying all of git.exe's
currently 7.5MB 109 times, just for backwards compatibility.

The simple solution would be to install really trivial shell script
wrappers in place of the builtins:

	for builtin in $BUILTINS
	do
		rm git-$builtin.exe
		printf '#!/bin/sh\nexec git %s "$@"\n' $builtin > git-builtin
		chmod a+x git-builtin
	done

This method would work -- even on Windows because Git for Windows ships a
full-fledged Bash. However, the Windows Bash comes at a price: it needs to
spin up a full-fledged POSIX emulation layer everytime it starts.
Therefore, the shell script solution would incur a significant performance
penalty.

The best solution the Git for Windows team could come up with is to extend
the Git wrapper -- that is needed to call Git from cmd.exe anyway, and
that weighs in with a scant 19KB -- to also serve as a drop-in replacement
for the builtins so that the following workaround is satisfactory:

	for builtin in $BUILTINS
	do
		cp git-wrapper.exe git-$builtin.exe
	done

This commit allows for this, by extending the module file parsing to
turn builtin command names like `git-log.exe ...` into calls to the main
Git executable: `git.exe log ...`.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-04 15:32:20 +02:00
Johannes Schindelin
7b1b48af52 Refactor git-wrapper into more functions
This prepares the wrapper for modifications to serve as a drop-in
replacement for the builtins.

This commit's diff is best viewed with the `-w` flag.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-04 15:32:20 +02:00
Johannes Schindelin
58bafab692 mingw: Compile the Git wrapper
We take care to embed the manifest, too, because we will modify the
wrapper in the next few commits to serve as a drop-in replacement for
the built-ins, i.e. we will want to call the wrapper under names such
as 'git-patch-id.exe', too.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-04 15:32:20 +02:00
Waldek Maleska
7cde13530f Correct fscanf formatting string for I64u values
Signed-off-by: Waldek Maleska <w.maleska@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-04 15:32:19 +02:00
Johannes Schindelin
8423083a66 Add Git for Windows' wrapper executable
On Windows, Git is faced by the challenge that it has to set up certain
environment variables before running Git under special circumstances
such as when Git is called directly from cmd.exe (i.e. outside any
Bash environment).

This source code was taken from msysGit's commit 74a198d:

https://github.com/msysgit/msysgit/blob/74a198d/src/git-wrapper/git-wrapper.c

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-04 15:32:19 +02:00
Johannes Schindelin
786d05c95e Silence GCC's "cast of pointer to integer of a different size" warning
When calculating hashes from pointers, it actually makes sense to cut
off the most significant bits. In that case, said warning does not make
a whole lot of sense.

So let's just work around it.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-04 15:32:19 +02:00
Johannes Schindelin
0a57e7bae1 Squelch warning about an integer overflow
We cannot rely on long integers to have more than 32 bits...

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-04 15:32:18 +02:00
Johannes Schindelin
fe5b747acb Facilitate debugging Git executables in tests with gdb
When prefixing a Git call in the test suite with 'TEST_GDB_GIT=1 ', it
will now be run with GDB, allowing the developer to debug test failures
more conveniently.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-04 15:32:18 +02:00
Pat Thoyts
182edc4f71 remote-http(s): Support SOCKS proxies
With this patch we properly support SOCKS proxies, configured e.g. like
this:

	git config http.proxy socks5://192.168.67.1:32767

Without this patch, Git mistakenly tries to use SOCKS proxies as if they
were HTTP proxies, resulting in a error message like:

	fatal: unable to access 'http://.../': Proxy CONNECT aborted

This patch was required to work behind a faulty AP and scraped from
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/15227130/#15228479 and guarded with
an appropriate cURL version check by Johannes Schindelin.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-04 15:32:18 +02:00
Johannes Schindelin
70e02bc1c3 Only use CURLOPT_LOGIN_OPTIONS if it is actually available
This fixes the compilation on an older Linux that was used to debug
test failures when upgrading Git for Windows to Git v2.3.0.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-04 15:32:18 +02:00
Erik Faye-Lund
96770a7a26 Makefile: do not depend on curl-config
MinGW builds of cURL does not ship with curl-config unless built
with the autoconf based build system, which is not the practice
recommended by the documentation. MsysGit has had issues with
binaries of that sort, so it has switched away from autoconf-based
cURL-builds.

Unfortunately, broke pushing over WebDAV on Windows, because
http-push.c depends on cURL's multi-threaded API, which we could
not determine the presence of any more.

Since troublesome curl-versions are ancient, and not even present
in RedHat 5, let's just assume cURL is capable instead of doing a
non-robust check.

Instead, add a check for curl_multi_init to our configure-script,
for those on ancient system. They probably already need to do the
configure-dance anyway.

Signed-off-by: Erik Faye-Lund <kusmabite@gmail.com>
2015-10-04 15:32:18 +02:00
Thomas Braun
a2f94713b3 Config option to disable side-band-64k for transport
Since commit 0c499ea60f the send-pack builtin uses the side-band-64k
capability if advertised by the server.

Unfortunately this breaks pushing over the dump git protocol if used
over a network connection.

The detailed reasons for this breakage are (by courtesy of Jeff Preshing,
quoted from ttps://groups.google.com/d/msg/msysgit/at8D7J-h7mw/eaLujILGUWoJ):
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
MinGW wraps Windows sockets in CRT file descriptors in order to mimic the
functionality of POSIX sockets. This causes msvcrt.dll to treat sockets as
Installable File System (IFS) handles, calling ReadFile, WriteFile,
DuplicateHandle and CloseHandle on them. This approach works well in simple
cases on recent versions of Windows, but does not support all usage patterns.
In particular, using this approach, any attempt to read & write concurrently
on the same socket (from one or more processes) will deadlock in a scenario
where the read waits for a response from the server which is only invoked after
the write. This is what send_pack currently attempts to do in the use_sideband
codepath.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------

The new config option "sendpack.sideband" allows to override the side-band-64k
capability of the server, and thus makes the dump git protocol work.

Other transportation methods like ssh and http/https still benefit from
the sideband channel, therefore the default value of "sendpack.sideband"
is still true.

Signed-off-by: Thomas Braun <thomas.braun@byte-physics.de>
2015-10-04 15:32:17 +02:00
마누엘
023e9cacc6 readme: added link to governance model
After publishing the governance model on the [developer
page](http://git-for-windows.github.io), lets add a link on the
`README.md` too.

Signed-off-by: 마누엘 <nalla@hamal.uberspace.de>
2015-10-04 15:32:17 +02:00
The Gitter Badger
0123963d00 Added Gitter badge 2015-10-04 15:32:17 +02:00
Heiko Voigt
e76577893b help: correct behavior for is_executable on Windows
The previous implementation said that the filesystem information on
Windows is not reliable to determine whether a file is executable.
To find gather this information it was peeking into the first two bytes
of a file to see whether it looks executable.
Apart from the fact that on Windows executables are usually defined as
such by their extension it lead to slow opening of help file in some
situations.

When you have virus scanner running calling open on an executable file
is a potentially expensive operation. See the following measurements (in
seconds) for example.

With virus scanner running (coldcache):

$ ./a.exe /libexec/git-core/
before open (git-add.exe): 0.000000
after open (git-add.exe): 0.412873
before open (git-annotate.exe): 0.000175
after open (git-annotate.exe): 0.397925
before open (git-apply.exe): 0.000243
after open (git-apply.exe): 0.399996
before open (git-archive.exe): 0.000147
after open (git-archive.exe): 0.397783
before open (git-bisect--helper.exe): 0.000160
after open (git-bisect--helper.exe): 0.397700
before open (git-blame.exe): 0.000160
after open (git-blame.exe): 0.399136
...

With virus scanner running (hotcache):

$ ./a.exe /libexec/git-core/
before open (git-add.exe): 0.000000
after open (git-add.exe): 0.000325
before open (git-annotate.exe): 0.000229
after open (git-annotate.exe): 0.000177
before open (git-apply.exe): 0.000167
after open (git-apply.exe): 0.000150
before open (git-archive.exe): 0.000154
after open (git-archive.exe): 0.000156
before open (git-bisect--helper.exe): 0.000132
after open (git-bisect--helper.exe): 0.000180
before open (git-blame.exe): 0.000718
after open (git-blame.exe): 0.000724
...

This test did just list the given directory and open() each file in it.

With this patch I get:

$ time git help git
Launching default browser to display HTML ...

real    0m8.723s
user    0m0.000s
sys     0m0.000s

and without

$ time git help git
Launching default browser to display HTML ...

real    1m37.734s
user    0m0.000s
sys     0m0.031s

both tests with cold cache and giving the machine some time to settle
down after restart.

Signed-off-by: Heiko Voigt <heiko.voigt@mahr.de>
2015-10-04 15:32:16 +02:00
Johannes Schindelin
c68bb49f63 Add a README.md
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-04 15:32:16 +02:00
Adam Roben
2b73d829cf Make non-.exe externals work again
7ebac8cb94 made launching of .exe
externals work when installed in Unicode paths. But it broke launching
of non-.exe externals, no matter where they were installed. We now
correctly maintain the UTF-8 and UTF-16 paths in tandem in lookup_prog.

This fixes t5526, among others.

Signed-off-by: Adam Roben <adam@roben.org>
2015-10-04 15:32:15 +02:00
Adam Roben
27d4efa7e1 Fix launching of externals from Unicode paths
If Git were installed in a path containing non-ASCII characters,
commands such as git-am and git-submodule, which are implemented as
externals, would fail to launch with the following error:

> fatal: 'am' appears to be a git command, but we were not
> able to execute it. Maybe git-am is broken?

This was due to lookup_prog not being Unicode-aware. It was somehow
missed in 2ee5a1a14a.

Note that the only problem in this function was calling
GetFileAttributes instead of GetFileAttributesW. The calls to access()
were fine because access() is a macro which resolves to mingw_access,
which already handles Unicode correctly. But I changed lookup_prog to
use _waccess directly so that we only convert the path to UTF-16 once.

Signed-off-by: Adam Roben <adam@roben.org>
2015-10-04 15:32:15 +02:00
Evgeny Pashkin
9fca732215 Fixed wrong path delimiter in exe finding
On Windows XP3 in git bash
git clone git@github.com:octocat/Spoon-Knife.git
cd Spoon-Knife
git gui
menu Remote\Fetch from\origin
error: cannot spawn git: No such file or directory
error: could not run rev-list

if u run
git fetch --all
it worked normal in git bash or gitgui tools

In second version CreateProcess get 'C:\Git\libexec\git-core/git.exe' in
first version - C:/Git/libexec/git-core/git.exe and not executes (unix
slashes)

after fixing C:\Git\libexec\git-core\git.exe or
C:/Git/libexec/git-core\git.exe it works normal

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-04 15:32:15 +02:00
Johannes Schindelin
8c17ad2283 Always auto-gc after calling a fast-import transport
After importing anything with fast-import, we should always let the
garbage collector do its job, since the objects are written to disk
inefficiently.

This brings down an initial import of http://selenic.com/hg from about
230 megabytes to about 14.

In the future, we may want to make this configurable on a per-remote
basis, or maybe teach fast-import about it in the first place.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-04 15:32:14 +02:00
Sverre Rabbelier
be1a90d42e remote-helper: check helper status after import/export
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Sverre Rabbelier <srabbelier@gmail.com>
2015-10-04 15:32:14 +02:00
Sverre Rabbelier
6ae7c9e5f5 transport-helper: add trailing --
[PT: ensure we add an additional element to the argv array]
2015-10-04 15:32:14 +02:00
Johannes Schindelin
ec2d57de3c fast-export: do not refer to non-existing marks
When calling `git fast-export a..a b` when a and b refer to the same
commit, nothing would be exported, and an incorrect reset line would
be printed for b ('from :0').

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Sverre Rabbelier <srabbelier@gmail.com>
2015-10-04 15:32:14 +02:00
Sebastian Schuberth
05fc604ace mingw: Fix submodule tests t7400, t7405, t7406
Again, avoid using echo (which issues DOS line endings on msysGit) to not mix
with Unix line-endings issued by git built-ins, even if this is at the cost of
calling an external executable (cat) instead of a shell built-in (echo).

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-04 15:32:13 +02:00
마누엘
12adcecfd0 mingw: Fix CVS-related tests
The CVS tests expect `pwd` to return a POSIX-style directory. Let's skip
our MinGW-specific override to let `pwd` output a Windows-style directory
for that reason.

Helped-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: 마누엘 <nalla@hamal.uberspace.de>
2015-10-04 15:32:13 +02:00
마누엘
33c625e689 mingw: Fix git-svn tests
There are some issues with the git-svn test cases when they are
being run on windows under a MINGW build. Some things are not
available like the changing of the execute flag of shell scripts
via the chmod command. Also there were problems with folder names
that end with a dot on windows.

Signed-off-by: 마누엘 <nalla@users.noreply.github.com>
2015-10-04 15:32:13 +02:00
Johannes Schindelin
1d50718de8 Skip t9020 with MSys2
POSIX-to-Windows path mangling would make it fail.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-04 15:32:13 +02:00
Johannes Schindelin
223e1c8f72 Skip t0204 for MinGW Git
As per https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/x99tb11d.aspx:

	The set of available locale names, languages, country/region
	codes, and code pages includes all those supported by the Windows
	NLS API except code pages that require more than two bytes per
	character, such as UTF-7 and UTF-8.

Therefore, MinGW gettext cannot cope with UTF-8 at all, because it uses
the Win32 API internally.

However, when the test asks `locale -a` it reports that is_US.utf8 is
available, because that `locale` is actually an *MSys2* program (and MSys2
can cope with UTF-8 alright).

Let's just skip this test for MinGW Git altogether.

Helped-by: 마누엘 <nalla@users.noreply.github.com>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-04 15:32:13 +02:00
Johannes Schindelin
db9be1b8fb t0200: disable more tests with MSys2 that rely on locale.exe
There is a MinGW gettext.exe, but still no MinGW locale.exe. Instead the
MSys2 locale.exe kicks in, which corresponds to the MSys2 gettext.exe,
however. Therefore some assumptions of t0200 cannot be fulfilled when
running inside MSys2.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-04 15:32:12 +02:00
Johannes Schindelin
4e64511c2a Mark t0027-auto-crlf as cheap enough for MinGW
t0027 is marked expensive, but really, for MinGW we want to run these
tests always.

Suggested by Thomas Braun.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-04 15:32:12 +02:00
Thomas Braun
bc6089d586 t0027: Disable test on MINGW
We can't mmap 2GB of RAM on our 32bit platform, so
just disable the test.

Signed-off-by: Thomas Braun <thomas.braun@byte-physics.de>
2015-10-04 15:32:12 +02:00
Thomas Braun
e40bc8b034 t1508: Be more clever than msys path substitution
A string of the form "@/abcd" is considered a file path
by the msys layer and therefore translated to a windows path.

Here the trick is to double the slashes.

The msys patch translation can be studied with the following
test program:

 #include <stdio.h>
 #include <stdlib.h>

 int main(int argc, char** argv)
 {
 unsigned int i;
 for(i=1; i < argc; i++)
 	printf("argv[%d]=%s\n",i, argv[i]);

 exit(0);
 }

Signed-off-by: Thomas Braun <thomas.braun@byte-physics.de>
2015-10-04 15:32:12 +02:00
Thomas Braun
b277f33ee1 t5503: Mark flaky tests as known breakages
As non reliable tests are nasty.

Signed-off-by: Thomas Braun <thomas.braun@byte-physics.de>
2015-10-04 15:32:12 +02:00
Stepan Kasal
00d2d64604 Revert "test: fix t7001 cp to use POSIX options"
This reverts commit 00764ca1, as our ancient version of "cp" has
problems about the "new" POSIX option "-P" (yields exit code 1).
2015-10-04 15:32:11 +02:00
Stepan Kasal
16bc28469a tests: turn off git-daemon tests if FIFOs are not available
Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
2015-10-04 15:32:11 +02:00
Karsten Blees
a02ad99a58 t800[12]: work around MSys limitation
MSys works very hard to convert Unix-style paths into DOS-style ones.
*Very* hard.

So hard, indeed, that

	git blame -L/hello/,/green/

is translated into something like

	git blame -LC:/msysgit/hello/,C:/msysgit/green/

As seen in msys_p2w in src\msys\msys\rt\src\winsup\cygwin\path.cc, line
3204ff:

	case '-':
	  //
	  // here we check for POSIX paths as attributes to a POSIX switch.
	  //
	...

seemingly absolute POSIX paths in single-letter options get expanded by
msys.dll unless they contain '=' or ';'.

So a quick and very dirty fix is to use '-L/;*evil/'. (Using an equal sign
works only when it is before a comma, so in the above example, /=*green/
would still be converted to a DOS-style path.)

Commit-message-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-04 15:32:11 +02:00
Pat Thoyts
5db25fe9e7 t0008: avoid absolute path on Windows as colon is used in the tests
The test separator char is a colon which means any absolute paths on windows
confuse the tests that use global_excludes.

Suggested-by: Karsten Blees <karsten.blees@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Pat Thoyts <patthoyts@users.sourceforge.net>
2015-10-04 15:32:11 +02:00
Johannes Schindelin
3592ca1fad Work around a problem identified by BuildHive
Apparently the signal handling is not quite correct in the fsckobject
handling (most likely we rely on a side effect that lets us still output
some message after receiving a signal 13 but in the BuildHive setup this
fails intermittently).

As a consequence, the push in t5504 does fail as expected, but fails to
output anything (unexpected). Since this is good enough for now, let's
handle an empty output as success, too.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-04 15:32:11 +02:00