"git merge-file" can be run outside a repository, but it ignored
all configuration, even the per-user ones. The command now uses
available configuration files to find its customization.
* yt/merge-file-outside-a-repository:
merge-file: honor merge.conflictStyle outside of a repository
Allow recording process ID of the process that holds the lock next
to a lockfile for diagnosis.
* pc/lockfile-pid:
lockfile: add PID file for debugging stale locks
When running outside a repository, git merge-file ignores the
merge.conflictStyle configuration variable entirely. Since the
function receives `repo` from the caller (which is NULL outside a
repository), and repo_config() falls back to reading system and user
configuration when passed NULL, pass `repo` to repo_config()
unconditionally.
Also document that merge.conflictStyle is honored.
Signed-off-by: Yannik Tausch <dev@ytausch.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
"git merge-ours" is taught to work better in a sparse checkout.
* sb/merge-ours-sparse:
merge-ours: integrate with sparse-index
merge-ours: drop USE_THE_REPOSITORY_VARIABLE
Rename three functions around the commit_list data structure.
* ps/commit-list-functions-renamed:
commit: rename `free_commit_list()` to conform to coding guidelines
commit: rename `reverse_commit_list()` to conform to coding guidelines
commit: rename `copy_commit_list()` to conform to coding guidelines
Giving "git last-modified" a tree (not a commit-ish) died an
uncontrolled death, which has been corrected.
* tc/last-modified-not-a-tree:
last-modified: verify revision argument is a commit-ish
last-modified: remove double error message
last-modified: fix memory leak when more than one commit is given
last-modified: rewrite error message when more than one commit given
The merge-ours built-in opens the index to compare it against HEAD.
The machinery used to do this (i.e. run_diff_index()) is capable of
working with a sparse index, but the start-up sequence of this
command does not take the necessary steps, so we end up expanding the
index fully before doing the comparison.
In order to convince sparse-index.c:is_sparse_index_allowed() to
return true, we need to:
- Read basic configuration with git_default_config so that global
variables like core_apply_sparse_checkout are populated.
merge-ours currently does not read configuration at all.
- Set command_requires_full_index to 0.
With that, the command can work without expanding the index fully
before doing its work.
Signed-off-by: Sam Bostock <sam@sambostock.ca>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
ISO C23 redefines strchr and friends that tradiotionally took
a const pointer and returned a non-const pointer derived from it to
preserve constness (i.e., if you ask for a substring in a const
string, you get a const pointer to the substring). Update code
paths that used non-const pointer to receive their results that did
not have to be non-const to adjust.
* cf/c23-const-preserving-strchr-updates-0:
gpg-interface: remove an unnecessary NULL initialization
global: constify some pointers that are not written to
The recent glibc 2.43 release had the following change listed in its
NEWS file:
For ISO C23, the functions bsearch, memchr, strchr, strpbrk, strrchr,
strstr, wcschr, wcspbrk, wcsrchr, wcsstr and wmemchr that return
pointers into their input arrays now have definitions as macros that
return a pointer to a const-qualified type when the input argument is
a pointer to a const-qualified type.
When compiling with GCC 15, which defaults to -std=gnu23, this causes
many warnings like this:
merge-ort.c: In function ‘apply_directory_rename_modifications’:
merge-ort.c:2734:36: warning: initialization discards ‘const’ qualifier from pointer target type [-Wdiscarded-qualifiers]
2734 | char *last_slash = strrchr(cur_path, '/');
| ^~~~~~~
This patch fixes the more obvious ones by making them const when we do
not write to the returned pointer.
Signed-off-by: Collin Funk <collin.funk1@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The "-z" and "--max-depth" documentation (and implementation of
"-z") in the "git last-modified" command have been updated.
* tc/last-modified-options-cleanup:
last-modified: change default max-depth to 0
last-modified: document option '--max-depth'
last-modified: document option '-z'
last-modified: clarify in the docs the command takes a pathspec
The computation of column width made by "git diff --stat" was
confused when pathnames contain non-ASCII characters.
* lp/diff-stat-utf8-display-width-fix:
t4073: add test for diffstat paths length when containing UTF-8 chars
diff: improve scaling of filenames in diffstat to handle UTF-8 chars
HTTP transport failed to authenticate in some code paths, which has
been corrected.
* ap/http-probe-rpc-use-auth:
remote-curl: use auth for probe_rpc() requests too
Avoid local submodule repository directory paths overlapping with
each other by encoding submodule names before using them as path
components.
* ar/submodule-gitdir-tweak:
submodule: detect conflicts with existing gitdir configs
submodule: hash the submodule name for the gitdir path
submodule: fix case-folding gitdir filesystem collisions
submodule--helper: fix filesystem collisions by encoding gitdir paths
builtin/credential-store: move is_rfc3986_unreserved to url.[ch]
submodule--helper: add gitdir migration command
submodule: allow runtime enabling extensions.submodulePathConfig
submodule: introduce extensions.submodulePathConfig
builtin/submodule--helper: add gitdir command
submodule: always validate gitdirs inside submodule_name_to_gitdir
submodule--helper: use submodule_name_to_gitdir in add_submodule
"git add -p" and friends note what the current status of the hunk
being shown is.
* aa/add-p-previous-decisions:
add -p: show user's hunk decision when selecting hunks
"git blame --ignore-revs=... --color-lines" did not account for
ignored revisions passing blame to the same commit an adjacent line
gets blamed for.
* rs/blame-ignore-colors-fix:
blame: fix coloring for repeated suspects
The option --ignore-rev passes the blame to an older commit. This can
cause adjacent scoreboard entries to blame the same commit. Currently
we only look at the present entry when determining whether a line needs
to be colored for --color-lines. Check the previous entry as well.
Reported-by: Seth McDonald <sethmcmail@pm.me>
Signed-off-by: René Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Replace old-style path checks with Git's dedicated test helpers:
- test -f → test_path_is_file
- test -d → test_path_is_dir
- test -s → test_file_not_empty
Fix typos with the word "subsequent"
Found using: git grep "test -[efd]" t/
This improves test readability and provides better error messages
when path checks fail.
Signed-off-by: HodaSalim <hoda.s.salim@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The string_list API gains a new helper, string_list_sort_u(), and
new unit tests to extend coverage.
* ac/string-list-sort-u-and-tests:
string-list: add string_list_sort_u() that mimics "sort -u"
u-string-list: add unit tests for string-list methods
A handful of code paths that started using batched ref update API
(after Git 2.51 or so) lost detailed error output, which have been
corrected.
* kn/ref-batch-output-error-reporting-fix:
fetch: delay user information post committing of transaction
receive-pack: utilize rejected ref error details
fetch: utilize rejected ref error details
update-ref: utilize rejected error details if available
refs: add rejection detail to the callback function
refs: skip to next ref when current ref is rejected
The setup phase in 't/perf/p3400-rebase.sh' generates 100 commits to
simulate a noisy history. It currently uses a shell loop that invokes
'git add', 'git commit', 'test_seq', and 'sort' in each iteration.
This incurs significant overhead due to repeated process spawning.
Optimize the setup by using 'git fast-import' to generate the commit
history. Additionally, pre-compute the forward and reversed file contents
to avoid repetitive execution of 'seq' and 'sort'.
To ensure the test measures rebase performance against a consistent
object layout (rather than the suboptimal pack/loose objects created
by the raw import), perform a full repack (`git repack -a -d`) at the
end of the setup.
This reduces the setup time significantly while maintaining the validity
of the subsequent performance tests.
Performance enhancement (Average value of 5 tests):
Real Rebase
Before: 29.045s 13.34s
After: 21.989s 12.84s
Measured on Lenovo Yoga 2020, Ubuntu 24.04.
Signed-off-by: Tian Yuchen <a3205153416@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Passing a non-committish revision to git-last-modified(1) triggers the
following BUG:
git last-modified HEAD^{tree}
BUG: builtin/last-modified.c:456: paths remaining beyond boundary in last-modified
Fix this error by ensuring that the given revision peels to a commit.
This change also adds a test to verify git-last-modified(1) can operate
on an annotated tag. For this an annotated tag is added that points to
the second commit. But this causes ambiguous results when calling
git-name-rev(1) with `--tags`, because now two tags point to the same
commit. To remove this ambiguity, pass `--exclude=<tag>` to
git-name-rev(1) to exclude the new annotated tag.
Reported-by: Gusted <gusted@codeberg.org>
Signed-off-by: Toon Claes <toon@iotcl.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When more than one commit is passed to the git-last-modified(1) command,
this error message was printed:
error: last-modified can only operate on one tree at a time
Calling these a "tree" is technically not correct. git-last-modified(1)
expects revisions that peel to a commit.
Rephrase the error message to:
error: last-modified can only operate on one commit at a time
While at it, modify the test to ensure the correct error message is
printed.
Signed-off-by: Toon Claes <toon@iotcl.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
"git replay" is taught to drop commits that become empty (not the
ones that are empty in the original).
* pw/replay-drop-empty:
replay: drop commits that become empty
"git history" history rewriting UI.
* ps/history:
builtin/history: implement "reword" subcommand
builtin: add new "history" command
wt-status: provide function to expose status for trees
replay: support updating detached HEAD
replay: support empty commit ranges
replay: small set of cleanups
builtin/replay: move core logic into "libgit.a"
builtin/replay: extract core logic to replay revisions
Many callsites of string_list_remove_duplicates() call it
immdediately after calling string_list_sort(), understandably
as the former requires string-list to be sorted, it is clear
that these places are sorting only to remove duplicates and
for no other reason.
Introduce a helper function string_list_sort_u that combines
these two calls that often appear together, to simplify
these callsites. Replace the current calls of those methods with
string_list_sort_u().
Signed-off-by: Amisha Chhajed <amishhhaaaa@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Unit tests in u-string-list.c does not cover several methods
in string-list, this gap in coverage makes it difficult to
ensure no regressions are introduced in future changes.
Add unit tests for the following methods to enhance coverage:
string_list_remove_empty_items()
unsorted_string_list_has_string()
unsorted_string_list_delete_item()
string_list_has_string()
string_list_insert()
string_list_sort()
string_list_remove()
Signed-off-by: Amisha Chhajed <amishhhaaaa@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In Git 2.50 and earlier, we would display failure codes and error
message as part of the status display:
$ git fetch . v1.0.0:refs/heads/foo
error: cannot update ref 'refs/heads/foo': trying to write non-commit object f665776185 to branch 'refs/heads/foo'
From .
! [new tag] v1.0.0 -> foo (unable to update local ref)
With the addition of batched updates, this information is no longer
shown to the user:
$ git fetch . v1.0.0:refs/heads/foo
From .
* [new tag] v1.0.0 -> foo
error: cannot update ref 'refs/heads/foo': trying to write non-commit object f665776185 to branch 'refs/heads/foo'
Since reference updates are batched and processed together at the end,
information around the outcome is not available during individual
reference parsing.
To overcome this, collate and delay the output to the end. Introduce
`ref_update_display_info` which will hold individual update's
information and also whether the update failed or succeeded. This
finally allows us to iterate over all such updates and print them to the
user.
Using an dynamic array and strmap does add some overhead to
'git-fetch(1)', but from benchmarking this seems to be not too bad:
Benchmark 1: fetch: many refs (refformat = files, refcount = 1000, revision = master)
Time (mean ± σ): 42.6 ms ± 1.2 ms [User: 13.1 ms, System: 29.8 ms]
Range (min … max): 40.1 ms … 45.8 ms 47 runs
Benchmark 2: fetch: many refs (refformat = files, refcount = 1000, revision = HEAD)
Time (mean ± σ): 43.1 ms ± 1.2 ms [User: 12.7 ms, System: 30.7 ms]
Range (min … max): 40.5 ms … 45.8 ms 48 runs
Summary
fetch: many refs (refformat = files, refcount = 1000, revision = master) ran
1.01 ± 0.04 times faster than fetch: many refs (refformat = files, refcount = 1000, revision = HEAD)
Another approach would be to move the status printing logic to be
handled post the transaction being committed. That however would require
adding an iterator to the ref transaction that tracks both the outcome
(success/failure) and the original refspec information for each update,
which is more involved infrastructure work compared to the strmap
approach here.
Helped-by: Phillip Wood <phillip.wood123@gmail.com>
Reported-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In 9d2962a7c4 (receive-pack: use batched reference updates, 2025-05-19),
git-receive-pack(1) switched to using batched reference updates. This also
introduced a regression wherein instead of providing detailed error
messages for failed referenced updates, the users were provided generic
error messages based on the error type.
Now that the updates also contain detailed error message, propagate
those to the client via 'rp_error'. The detailed error messages can be
very verbose, for e.g. in the files backend, when trying to write a
non-commit object to a branch, you would see:
! [remote rejected] 3eaec9ccf3a53f168362a6b3fdeb73426fb9813d ->
branch (cannot update ref 'refs/heads/branch': trying to write
non-commit object 3eaec9ccf3a53f168362a6b3fdeb73426fb9813d to branch
'refs/heads/branch')
Here the refname is repeated multiple times due to how error messages
are propagated and filled over the code stack. This potentially can be
cleaned up in a future commit.
Reported-by: Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In 0e358de64a (fetch: use batched reference updates, 2025-05-19),
git-fetch(1) switched to using batched reference updates. This also
introduced a regression wherein instead of providing detailed error
messages for failed referenced updates, the users were provided generic
error messages based on the error type.
Similar to the previous commit, switch to using detailed error messages
if present for failed reference updates to fix this regression.
Reported-by: Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When git-update-ref(1) received the '--update-ref' flag, the error
details generated in the refs namespace wasn't propagated with failed
updates. Instead only an error code pertaining to the type of rejection
was noted.
This missed detailed error message which the user can act upon. The
previous commits added the required code to propagate these detailed
error messages from the refs namespace. Now that additional details are
available, let's output this additional details to stderr. This allows
users to have additional information over the already present machine
parsable output.
While we're here, improve the existing tests for the machine parsable
output by checking for the entire output string and not just the
rejection reason.
Reported-by: Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The "-z" and "--max-depth" documentation (and implementation of
"-z") in the "git last-modified" command have been updated.
* tc/last-modified-options-cleanup:
last-modified: change default max-depth to 0
last-modified: document option '--max-depth'
last-modified: document option '-z'
last-modified: clarify in the docs the command takes a pathspec
The computation of column width made by "git diff --stat" was
confused when pathnames contain non-ASCII characters.
* lp/diff-stat-utf8-display-width-fix:
t4073: add test for diffstat paths length when containing UTF-8 chars
diff: improve scaling of filenames in diffstat to handle UTF-8 chars
HTTP transport failed to authenticate in some code paths, which has
been corrected.
* ap/http-probe-rpc-use-auth:
remote-curl: use auth for probe_rpc() requests too
Avoid local submodule repository directory paths overlapping with
each other by encoding submodule names before using them as path
components.
* ar/submodule-gitdir-tweak:
submodule: detect conflicts with existing gitdir configs
submodule: hash the submodule name for the gitdir path
submodule: fix case-folding gitdir filesystem collisions
submodule--helper: fix filesystem collisions by encoding gitdir paths
builtin/credential-store: move is_rfc3986_unreserved to url.[ch]
submodule--helper: add gitdir migration command
submodule: allow runtime enabling extensions.submodulePathConfig
submodule: introduce extensions.submodulePathConfig
builtin/submodule--helper: add gitdir command
submodule: always validate gitdirs inside submodule_name_to_gitdir
submodule--helper: use submodule_name_to_gitdir in add_submodule
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
When a lock file is held, it can be helpful to know which process owns
it, especially when debugging stale locks left behind by crashed
processes. Add an optional feature that creates a companion PID file
alongside each lock file, containing the PID of the lock holder.
For a lock file "foo.lock", the PID file is named "foo~pid.lock". The
tilde character is forbidden in refnames and allowed in Windows
filenames, which guarantees no collision with the refs namespace
(e.g., refs "foo" and "foo~pid" cannot both exist). The file contains
a single line in the format "pid <value>" followed by a newline.
The PID file is created when a lock is acquired (if enabled), and
automatically cleaned up when the lock is released (via commit or
rollback). The file is registered as a tempfile so it gets cleaned up
by signal and atexit handlers if the process terminates abnormally.
When a lock conflict occurs, the code checks for an existing PID file
and, if found, uses kill(pid, 0) to determine if the process is still
running. This allows providing context-aware error messages:
Lock is held by process 12345. Wait for it to finish, or remove
the lock file to continue.
Or for a stale lock:
Lock was held by process 12345, which is no longer running.
Remove the stale lock file to continue.
The feature is controlled via core.lockfilePid configuration (boolean).
Defaults to false. When enabled, PID files are created for all lock
operations.
Existing PID files are always read when displaying lock errors,
regardless of the core.lockfilePid setting. This ensures helpful
diagnostics even when the feature was previously enabled and later
disabled.
Signed-off-by: Paulo Casaretto <pcasaretto@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Remove implicit reliance on the_repository global in the APIs
around tree objects and make it explicit which repository to work
in.
* rs/tree-wo-the-repository:
cocci: remove obsolete the_repository rules
cocci: convert parse_tree functions to repo_ variants
tree: stop using the_repository
tree: use repo_parse_tree()
path-walk: use repo_parse_tree_gently()
pack-bitmap-write: use repo_parse_tree()
delta-islands: use repo_parse_tree()
bloom: use repo_parse_tree()
add-interactive: use repo_parse_tree_indirect()
tree: add repo_parse_tree*()
environment: move access to core.maxTreeDepth into repo settings
The logic that avoids reusing MIDX files with a wrong checksum was
broken, which has been corrected.
* tb/midx-write-corrupt-checksum-fix:
midx-write.c: assume checksum-invalid MIDXs require an update
t/t5319-multi-pack-index.sh: drop early 'test_done'
"git repack --geometric" did not work with promisor packs, which
has been corrected.
* ps/geometric-repacking-with-promisor-remotes:
builtin/repack: handle promisor packs with geometric repacking
repack-promisor: extract function to remove redundant packs
repack-promisor: extract function to finalize repacking
repack-geometry: extract function to compute repacking split
builtin/pack-objects: exclude promisor objects with "--stdin-packs"