Add a new config `hook.forceStdoutToStderr` which allows enabling
extensions.hookStdoutToStderr by default at runtime, both for new
and existing repositories.
This makes it easier for users to enable hook parallelization for
hooks like pre-push by enforcing output consistency. See previous
commit for a more in-depth explanation & alternatives considered.
Signed-off-by: Adrian Ratiu <adrian.ratiu@collabora.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
All hooks already redirect stdout to stderr with the exception of
pre-push which has a known user who depends on the separate stdout
versus stderr outputs (the git-lfs project).
The pre-push behavior was a surprise which we found out about after
causing a regression for git-lfs. Notably, it might not be the only
exception (it's the one we know about). There might be more.
This presents a challenge because stdout_to_stderr is required for
hook parallelization, so run-command can buffer and de-interleave
the hook outputs using ungroup=0, when hook.jobs > 1.
Introduce an extension to enforce consistency: all hooks merge stdout
into stderr and can be safely parallelized. This provides a clean
separation and avoids breaking existing stdout vs stderr behavior.
When this extension is disabled, the `hook.jobs` config has no
effect for pre-push, to prevent garbled (interleaved) parallel
output, so it runs sequentially like before.
Alternatives I've considered to this extension include:
1. Allowing pre-push to run in parallel with interleaved output.
2. Always running pre-push sequentially (no parallel jobs for it).
3. Making users (only git-lfs? maybe more?) fix their hooks to read
stderr not stdout.
Out of all these alternatives, I think this extension is the most
reasonable compromise, to not break existing users, allow pre-push
parallel jobs for those who need it (with correct outputs) and also
future-proofing in case there are any more exceptions to be added.
Signed-off-by: Adrian Ratiu <adrian.ratiu@collabora.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Add a hook.<event>.jobs count config that allows users to override the
global hook.jobs setting for specific hook events.
This allows finer-grained control over parallelism on a per-event basis.
For example, to run `post-receive` hooks with up to 4 parallel jobs
while keeping other events at their global default:
[hook]
post-receive.jobs = 4
Signed-off-by: Adrian Ratiu <adrian.ratiu@collabora.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Expose the parallel job count as a command-line flag so callers can
request parallelism without relying only on the hook.jobs config.
Add tests covering serial/parallel execution and TTY behaviour under
-j1 vs -jN.
Signed-off-by: Emily Shaffer <emilyshaffer@google.com>
Helped-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Adrian Ratiu <adrian.ratiu@collabora.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Several hooks are known to be inherently non-parallelizable, so initialize
them with RUN_HOOKS_OPT_INIT_FORCE_SERIAL. This pins jobs=1 and overrides
any hook.jobs or runtime -j flags.
These hooks are:
applypatch-msg, pre-commit, prepare-commit-msg, commit-msg, post-commit,
post-checkout, and push-to-checkout.
Signed-off-by: Emily Shaffer <emilyshaffer@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Adrian Ratiu <adrian.ratiu@collabora.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Hooks always run in sequential order due to the hardcoded jobs == 1
passed to run_process_parallel(). Remove that hardcoding to allow
users to run hooks in parallel (opt-in).
Users need to decide which hooks to run in parallel, by specifying
"parallel = true" in the config, because git cannot know if their
specific hooks are safe to run or not in parallel (for e.g. two hooks
might write to the same file or call the same program).
Some hooks are unsafe to run in parallel by design: these will marked
in the next commit using RUN_HOOKS_OPT_INIT_FORCE_SERIAL.
The hook.jobs config specifies the default number of jobs applied to all
hooks which have parallelism enabled.
Signed-off-by: Emily Shaffer <emilyshaffer@google.com>
Helped-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Adrian Ratiu <adrian.ratiu@collabora.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Disabled hooks were filtered out of the cache entirely, making them
invisible to "git hook list". Keep them in the cache with a new
"disabled" flag which is propagated to the respective struct hook.
"git hook list" now shows disabled hooks annotated with "(disabled)"
in the config order. With --show-scope, it looks like:
$ git hook list --show-scope pre-commit
linter (global)
no-leaks (local, disabled)
hook from hookdir
A disabled hook without a command issues a warning instead of the
fatal "hook.X.command must be configured" error. We could also throw
an error, however it seemd a bit excessive to me in this case.
Suggested-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Adrian Ratiu <adrian.ratiu@collabora.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Users running "git hook list" can see which hooks are configured but
have no way to tell at which config scope (local, global, system...)
each hook was defined.
Store the scope from ctx->kvi->scope in the single-pass config callback,
then carry it through the cache to the hook structs, so we can expose it
to users via the "git hook list --show-scope" flag, which mirrors the
existing git config --show-scope convention.
Without the flag the output is unchanged.
Example usage:
$ git hook list --show-scope pre-commit
linter (global)
no-leaks (local)
hook from hookdir
Traditional hooks from the hookdir are unaffected by --show-scope since
the config scope concept does not apply to them.
Suggested-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Adrian Ratiu <adrian.ratiu@collabora.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
There is a documented expectation that configured hooks are
run before the hook from the hookdir. Add a test for it.
While at it, I noticed that `git hook list -h` runs twice
in the `git hook usage` test, so remove one invocation.
Suggested-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Adrian Ratiu <adrian.ratiu@collabora.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Fix some minor style nits pointed by Patrick and Junio:
* Use CALLOC_ARRAY instead of xcalloc.
* Init struct members during declaration.
* Simplify if condition boolean logic.
* Missing curly braces in if/else stmts.
* Unnecessary header includes.
* Capitalization in error/warn messages.
* Comment spelling: free'd -> freed.
These contain no logic changes, the code behaves the same as before.
Suggested-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Suggested-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Adrian Ratiu <adrian.ratiu@collabora.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* ar/config-hooks: (21 commits)
builtin/receive-pack: avoid spinning no-op sideband async threads
hook: add -z option to "git hook list"
hook: allow out-of-repo 'git hook' invocations
hook: allow event = "" to overwrite previous values
hook: allow disabling config hooks
hook: include hooks from the config
hook: add "git hook list" command
hook: run a list of hooks to prepare for multihook support
hook: add internal state alloc/free callbacks
receive-pack: convert receive hooks to hook API
receive-pack: convert update hooks to new API
run-command: poll child input in addition to output
hook: add jobs option
reference-transaction: use hook API instead of run-command
transport: convert pre-push to hook API
hook: allow separate std[out|err] streams
hook: convert 'post-rewrite' hook in sequencer.c to hook API
hook: provide stdin via callback
run-command: add stdin callback for parallelization
run-command: add helper for pp child states
...
"fsck" iterates over packfiles and its access to pack data caused
the list to be permuted, which caused it to loop forever; the code
to access pack data by "fsck" has been updated to avoid this.
* ps/fsck-stream-from-the-right-object-instance:
pack-check: fix verification of large objects
packfile: expose function to read object stream for an offset
object-file: adapt `stream_object_signature()` to take a stream
t/helper: improve "genrandom" test helper
"git config list" is taught to show the values interpreted for
specific type with "--type=<X>" option.
* ds/config-list-with-type:
config: use an enum for type
config: restructure format_config()
config: format colors quietly
color: add color_parse_quietly()
config: format expiry dates quietly
config: format paths gently
config: format bools or strings in helper
config: format bools or ints gently
config: format bools gently
config: format int64s gently
config: make 'git config list --type=<X>' work
config: add 'gently' parameter to format_config()
config: move show_all_config()
Clean-up the code around "git repo info" command.
* lo/repo-leftover-bits:
Documentation/git-repo: capitalize format descriptions
Documentation/git-repo: replace 'NUL' with '_NUL_'
t1901: adjust nul format output instead of expected value
t1900: rename t1900-repo to t1900-repo-info
repo: rename struct field to repo_info_field
repo: replace get_value_fn_for_key by get_repo_info_field
repo: rename repo_info_fields to repo_info_field
CodingGuidelines: instruct to name arrays in singular
"git maintenance" starts using the "geometric" strategy by default.
* ps/maintenance-geometric-default:
builtin/maintenance: use "geometric" strategy by default
t7900: prepare for switch of the default strategy
t6500: explicitly use "gc" strategy
t5510: explicitly use "gc" strategy
t5400: explicitly use "gc" strategy
t34xx: don't expire reflogs where it matters
t: disable maintenance where we verify object database structure
t: fix races caused by background maintenance
"git apply --directory=./un/../normalized/path" now normalizes the
given path before using it.
* jr/apply-directory-normalize:
apply: normalize path in --directory argument
API clean-up for the worktree subsystem.
* pw/no-more-NULL-means-current-worktree:
path: remove repository argument from worktree_git_path()
wt-status: avoid passing NULL worktree
"git fetch --deepen" that tries to go beyond merged branch used to
get confused where the updated shallow points are, which has been
corrected.
* sp/shallow-deepen-relative-fix:
shallow: handling fetch relative-deepen
shallow: free local object_array allocations
Allow the directory in which reference backends store their data to
be specified.
* kn/ref-location:
refs: add GIT_REFERENCE_BACKEND to specify reference backend
refs: allow reference location in refstorage config
refs: receive and use the reference storage payload
refs: move out stub modification to generic layer
refs: extract out `refs_create_refdir_stubs()`
setup: don't modify repo in `create_reference_database()`
A prefetch call can be triggered to access a stale diff_queue entry
after diffcore-break breaks a filepair into two and freed the
original entry that is no longer used, leading to a segfault, which
has been corrected.
* hy/diff-lazy-fetch-with-break-fix:
diffcore-break: avoid segfault with freed entries
"git add -p" learned a new mode that allows the user to revisit a
file that was already dealt with.
* aa/add-p-no-auto-advance:
add-patch: allow interfile navigation when selecting hunks
add-patch: allow all-or-none application of patches
add-patch: modify patch_update_file() signature
interactive -p: add new `--auto-advance` flag
Additional tests were introduced to see the interaction with netrc
auth with auth failure on the http transport.
* ag/http-netrc-tests:
t5550: add netrc tests for http 401/403
"git format-patch --from=<me>" did not honor the command line
option when writing out the cover letter, which has been corrected.
* mf/format-patch-honor-from-for-cover-letter:
format-patch: fix From header in cover letter
Extend the alias configuration syntax to allow aliases using
characters outside ASCII alphanumeric (plus '-').
* jh/alias-i18n:
completion: fix zsh alias listing for subsection aliases
alias: support non-alphanumeric names via subsection syntax
alias: prepare for subsection aliases
help: use list_aliases() for alias listing
Some tests assumed "iconv" is available without honoring ICONV
prerequisite, which has been corrected.
* ps/tests-wo-iconv-fixes:
t6006: don't use iconv(1) without ICONV prereq
t5550: add ICONV prereq to tests that use "$HTTPD_URL/error"
t4205: improve handling of ICONV prerequisite
t40xx: don't use iconv(1) without ICONV prereq
t: don't set ICONV prereq when iconv(1) is missing
CI update.
* ps/ci-gitlab-msvc-updates:
gitlab-ci: handle failed tests on MSVC+Meson job
gitlab-ci: use "run-test-slice-meson.sh"
ci: make test slicing consistent across Meson/Make
github: fix Meson tests not executing at all
meson: fix MERGE_TOOL_DIR with "--no-bin-wrappers"
ci: don't skip smallest test slice in GitLab
ci: handle failures of test-slice helper
It does not make much sense to apply the "incomplete-line"
whitespace rule to symbolic links, whose contents almost always
lack the final newline. "git apply" and "git diff" are now taught
to exclude them for a change to symbolic links.
* jc/whitespace-incomplete-line:
whitespace: symbolic links usually lack LF at the end
"git switch <name>", in an attempt to create a local branch <name>
after a remote tracking branch of the same name gave an advise
message to disambiguate using "git checkout", which has been
updated to use "git switch".
* jc/checkout-switch-restore:
checkout: tell "parse_remote_branch" which command is calling it
checkout: pass program-readable token to unified "main"
UI improvements for "git history reword".
* ps/history-ergonomics-updates:
Documentation/git-history: document default for "--update-refs="
builtin/history: rename "--ref-action=" to "--update-refs="
builtin/history: replace "--ref-action=print" with "--dry-run"
builtin/history: check for merges before asking for user input
builtin/history: perform revwalk checks before asking for user input
A handful of places used refs_for_each_ref_in() API incorrectly,
which has been corrected.
* ps/for-each-ref-in-fixes:
bisect: simplify string_list memory handling
bisect: fix misuse of `refs_for_each_ref_in()`
pack-bitmap: fix bug with exact ref match in "pack.preferBitmapTips"
pack-bitmap: deduplicate logic to iterate over preferred bitmap tips
"git repo info" learns "--keys" action to list known keys.
* lo/repo-info-keys:
repo: add new flag --keys to git-repo-info
repo: rename the output format "keyvalue" to "lines"
Add process ancestry data to trace2 on macOS to match what we
already do on Linux and Windows. Also adjust the way Windows
implementation reports this information to match the other two.
* mc/tr2-process-ancestry-cleanup:
t0213: add trace2 cmd_ancestry tests
test-tool: extend trace2 helper with 400ancestry
trace2: emit cmd_ancestry data for Windows
trace2: refactor Windows process ancestry trace2 event
build: include procinfo.c impl for macOS
trace2: add macOS process ancestry tracing
"git pack-objects --stdin-packs" with "--exclude-promisor-objects"
fetched objects that are promised, which was not wanted. This has
been fixed.
* ps/pack-concat-wo-backfill:
builtin/pack-objects: don't fetch objects when merging packs
"git rev-list" and friends learn "--maximal-only" to show only the
commits that are not reachable by other commits.
* ds/revision-maximal-only:
revision: add --maximal-only option
"auto filter" logic for large-object promisor remote.
* cc/lop-filter-auto:
fetch-pack: wire up and enable auto filter logic
promisor-remote: change promisor_remote_reply()'s signature
promisor-remote: keep advertised filters in memory
list-objects-filter-options: support 'auto' mode for --filter
doc: fetch: document `--filter=<filter-spec>` option
fetch: make filter_options local to cmd_fetch()
clone: make filter_options local to cmd_clone()
promisor-remote: allow a client to store fields
promisor-remote: refactor initialising field lists
The test 'keyvalue and nul format', as it description says, test both
`keyvalue` and `nul` format. These formats are similar, differing only in
their field separator (= in the former, LF in the latter) and their
record separator (LF in the former, NUL in the latter). This way, both
formats can be tested using the same expected output and only replacing
the separators in one of the output formats.
However, it is not desirable to have a NUL character in the files
compared by test_cmp because, if that assetion fails, diff will consider
them binary files and won't display the differences properly.
Adjust the output of `git repo structure --format=nul` in t1901, matching the
--format=keyvalue ones. Compare this output against the same value expected
from --format=keyvalue, without using files with NUL characters in
test_cmp.
Signed-off-by: Lucas Seiki Oshiro <lucasseikioshiro@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Since the commit bbb2b93348 (builtin/repo: introduce structure subcommand,
2025-10-21), t1901 specifically tests git-repo-structure. Rename
t1900-repo to t1900-repo-info to clarify that it focus solely on
git-repo-info subcommand.
Signed-off-by: Lucas Seiki Oshiro <lucasseikioshiro@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Git allows setting a different object directory via
'GIT_OBJECT_DIRECTORY', but provides no equivalent for references. In
the previous commit we extended the 'extensions.refStorage' config to
also support an URI input for reference backend with location.
Let's also add a new environment variable 'GIT_REFERENCE_BACKEND' that
takes in the same input as the config variable. Having an environment
variable allows us to modify the reference backend and location on the
fly for individual Git commands.
The environment variable also allows usage of alternate reference
directories during 'git-clone(1)' and 'git-init(1)'. Add the config to
the repository when created with the environment variable set.
When initializing the repository with an alternate reference folder,
create the required stubs in the repositories $GIT_DIR. The inverse,
i.e. removal of the ref store doesn't clean up the stubs in the $GIT_DIR
since that would render it unusable. Removal of ref store is only used
when migrating between ref formats and cleanup of the $GIT_DIR doesn't
make sense in such a situation.
Helped-by: Jean-Noël Avila <jn.avila@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The 'extensions.refStorage' config is used to specify the reference
backend for a given repository. Both the 'files' and 'reftable' backends
utilize the $GIT_DIR as the reference folder by default in
`get_main_ref_store()`.
Since the reference backends are pluggable, this means that they could
work with out-of-tree reference directories too. Extend the 'refStorage'
config to also support taking an URI input, where users can specify the
reference backend and the location.
Add the required changes to obtain and propagate this value to the
individual backends. Add the necessary documentation and tests.
Traditionally, for linked worktrees, references were stored in the
'$GIT_DIR/worktrees/<wt_id>' path. But when using an alternate reference
storage path, it doesn't make sense to store the main worktree
references in the new path, and the linked worktree references in the
$GIT_DIR. So, let's store linked worktree references in
'$ALTERNATE_REFERENCE_DIR/worktrees/<wt_id>'. To do this, create the
necessary files and folders while also adding stubs in the $GIT_DIR path
to ensure that it is still considered a Git directory.
Ideally, we would want to pass in a `struct worktree *` to individual
backends, instead of passing the `gitdir`. This allows them to handle
worktree specific logic. Currently, that is not possible since the
worktree code is:
- Tied to using the global `the_repository` variable.
- Is not setup before the reference database during initialization of
the repository.
Add a TODO in 'refs.c' to ensure we can eventually make that change.
Helped-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The t7900 test suite is exercising git-maintenance(1) and is thus of
course heavily reliant on the exact maintenance strategy. This reliance
comes in two flavors:
- One test explicitly wants to verify that git-gc(1) is run as part of
`git maintenance run`. This test is adapted by explicitly picking the
"gc" strategy.
- The other tests assume a specific shape of the object database,
which is dependent on whether or not we run auto-maintenance before
we come to the actual subject under test. These tests are adapted by
disabling auto-maintenance.
With these changes t7900 passes with both "gc" and "geometric" default
strategies.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The test in t6500 explicitly wants to exercise git-gc(1) and is thus
highly specific to the actual on-disk state of the repository and
specifically of the object database. An upcoming change modifies the
default maintenance strategy to be the "geometric" strategy though,
which breaks a couple of assumptions.
One fix would arguably be to disable auto-maintenance altogether, as we
do want to explicitly verify git-gc(1) anyway. But as the whole test
suite is about git-gc(1) in the first place it feels more sensible to
configure the default maintenance strategy to be "gc".
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
One of the tests in t5510 wants to verify that auto-gc does not lock up
when fetching into a repository. Adapt it to explicitly pick the "gc"
strategy for auto-maintenance.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In t5400 we verify that git-receive-pack(1) runs automated repository
maintenance in the remote repository. The check is performed indirectly
by observing an effect that git-gc(1) would have, namely to prune a
temporary object from the object database. In a subsequent commit we're
about to switch to the "geometric" strategy by default though, and here
we stop observing that effect.
Adapt the test to explicitly use the "gc" strategy to prepare for that
upcoming change.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
We have a couple of tests in the t34xx range that rely on reflogs. This
never really used to be a problem, but in a subsequent commit we will
change the default maintenance strategy from "gc" to "geometric", and
this will cause us to drop all reflogs in these tests.
This may seem surprising and like a bug at first, but it's actually not.
The main difference between these two strategies is that the "gc"
strategy will skip all maintenance in case the object database is in a
well-optimized state. The "geometric" strategy has separate subtasks
though, and the conditions for each of these tasks is evaluated on a
case by case basis. This means that even if the object database is in
good shape, we may still decide to expire reflogs.
So why is that a problem? The issue is that Git's test suite hardcodes
the committer and author dates to a date in 2005. Interestingly though,
these hardcoded dates not only impact the commits, but also the reflog
entries. The consequence is that all newly written reflog entries are
immediately considered stale as our reflog expiration threshold is in
the range of weeks, only. It follows that executing `git reflog expire`
will thus immediately purge all reflog entries.
This hasn't been a problem in our test suite by pure chance, as the
repository shapes simply didn't cause us to perform actual garbage
collection. But with the upcoming "geometric" strategy we _will_ start
to execute `git reflog expire`, thus surfacing this issue.
Prepare for this by explicitly disabling reflog expiration in tests
impacted by this upcoming change.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
We have a couple of tests that explicitly verify the structure of the
object database. Naturally, this structure is dependent on whether or
not we run repository maintenance: if it decides to optimize the object
database the expected structure is likely to not materialize.
Explicitly disable auto-maintenance in such tests so that we are not
dependent on decisions made by our maintenance.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Many Git commands spawn git-maintenance(1) to optimize the repository in
the background. By default, performing the maintenance is for most of
the part asynchronous: we fork the executable and then continue with the
rest of our business logic.
This is working as expected for our users, but this behaviour is
somewhat problematic for our test suite as this is inherently racy. We
have many tests that verify the on-disk state of repositories, and those
tests may easily race with our background maintenance. In a similar
fashion, we may end up with processes that "leak" out of a current test
case.
Until now this tends to not be much of a problem. Our maintenance uses
git-gc(1) by default, which knows to bail out in case there aren't
either too many packfiles or too many loose objects. So even if other
data structures would need to be optimized, we won't do so unless the
object database also needs optimizations.
This is about to change though, as a subsequent commit will switch to
the "geometric" maintenance strategy as a default. The consequence is
that we will run required optimizations even if the object database is
well-optimized. And this uncovers races between our test suite and
background maintenance all over the place.
Disabling maintenance outright in our test suite is not really an
option, as it would result in significant divergence from the "real
world" and reduce our test coverage. But we've got an alternative up our
sleeves: we can ensure that garbage collection runs synchronously by
overriding the "maintenance.autoDetach" configuration.
Of course that also diverges from the real world, as we now stop testing
that background maintenance interacts in a benign way with normal Git
commands. But on the other hand this ensures that the maintenance itself
does not for example lead to data loss in a more reproducible way.
Another concern is that this would make execution of the test suite much
slower. But a quick benchmark on my machine demonstrates that this does
not seem to be the case:
Benchmark 1: meson test (revision = HEAD~)
Time (mean ± σ): 131.182 s ± 1.293 s [User: 853.737 s, System: 1160.479 s]
Range (min … max): 130.001 s … 132.563 s 3 runs
Benchmark 2: meson test (revision = HEAD)
Time (mean ± σ): 129.554 s ± 0.507 s [User: 849.040 s, System: 1152.664 s]
Range (min … max): 129.000 s … 129.994 s 3 runs
Summary
meson test (revision = HEAD) ran
1.01 ± 0.01 times faster than meson test (revision = HEAD~)
Funny enough, it even seems as if this speeds up test execution ever so
slightly, but that may just as well be noise.
Introduce a new `GIT_TEST_MAINT_AUTO_DETACH` environment variable that
allows us to override the auto-detach behaviour and set that variable in
our tests.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
After we have freed the file pair, we should set the queue reference to null.
When computing a diff in a partial clone, there is a chance that we
could trigger a prefetch of missing objects when there are freed entries in
the global diff queue due to break-rewrites detection. The segfault only occurs
if an entry has been freed by break-rewrites and there is an entry
to be prefetched.
There is a new test in t4067 that trigger the segmentation fault that results
in this case. The test explicitly fetch the necessary blobs to trigger the
break rewrites, some blobs are left to be prefetched.
The fix is to set the queue pointer to NULL after it is freed, the prefetch
will skip NULL entries.
Signed-off-by: Han Young <hanyang.tony@bytedance.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>