Files
git/git-sh-setup.sh
Heiko Voigt 526bfa323c Windows: Always normalize paths to Windows-style
It appears that `pwd` returns the POSIX-style or the DOS-style path
depending which style the previous `cd` used. To normalize, enforce `pwd
-W` in scripts.

From the original e-mail exchange:

On Thu, Mar 22, 2012 at 11:13:37AM +0100, Sebastian Schuberth wrote:
> On Wed, Mar 21, 2012 at 22:21, Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org> wrote:
>
> > I build git and run its tests outside the msysgit environment. Does that
> > explain the difference? (And I use CMD.)
>
> It does not make a difference for me. I started cmd.exe at
> c:\msysgit\git\t, added c:\msysgit\bin temporarily to PATH, and ran
> "sh t5526-fetch-submodules.sh -i -v", and the test still fails.

Yes it probably does. Johannes said that he runs the tests outside of
the msysgit folder. That way there is only one path the submodule script
gets reported and not two like '/c/msysgit/git' and '/git'.

That would explain to me why it is passing.

I am afraid that the only solution is to patch msys itself to report the
long absolute path when passing window style paths to cd. Currently when
I do

	cd c:/msysgit/git

I will end up in '/git' instead of the long path.

I found that there is a -W option to pwd in msys bash which makes it
always return the real windows path. A normalization in that direction
is unique and thus might be more robust. Have a look at the attached
patch. With this at least t5526 passes. I was not able to run the whole
testsuite properly at the moment. I can have a look at that tomorrow.

What do you think?

Cheers Heiko

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2013-11-29 13:14:04 +00:00

360 lines
8.1 KiB
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#!/bin/sh
#
# This is included in commands that either have to be run from the toplevel
# of the repository, or with GIT_DIR environment variable properly.
# If the GIT_DIR does not look like the right correct git-repository,
# it dies.
# Having this variable in your environment would break scripts because
# you would cause "cd" to be taken to unexpected places. If you
# like CDPATH, define it for your interactive shell sessions without
# exporting it.
# But we protect ourselves from such a user mistake nevertheless.
unset CDPATH
# Similarly for IFS, but some shells (e.g. FreeBSD 7.2) are buggy and
# do not equate an unset IFS with IFS with the default, so here is
# an explicit SP HT LF.
IFS='
'
git_broken_path_fix () {
case ":$PATH:" in
*:$1:*) : ok ;;
*)
PATH=$(
SANE_TOOL_PATH="$1"
IFS=: path= sep=
set x $PATH
shift
for elem
do
case "$SANE_TOOL_PATH:$elem" in
(?*:/bin | ?*:/usr/bin)
path="$path$sep$SANE_TOOL_PATH"
sep=:
SANE_TOOL_PATH=
esac
path="$path$sep$elem"
sep=:
done
echo "$path"
)
;;
esac
}
# @@BROKEN_PATH_FIX@@
die () {
die_with_status 1 "$@"
}
die_with_status () {
status=$1
shift
printf >&2 '%s\n' "$*"
exit "$status"
}
GIT_QUIET=
say () {
if test -z "$GIT_QUIET"
then
printf '%s\n' "$*"
fi
}
if test -n "$OPTIONS_SPEC"; then
usage() {
"$0" -h
exit 1
}
parseopt_extra=
[ -n "$OPTIONS_KEEPDASHDASH" ] &&
parseopt_extra="--keep-dashdash"
eval "$(
echo "$OPTIONS_SPEC" |
git rev-parse --parseopt $parseopt_extra -- "$@" ||
echo exit $?
)"
else
dashless=$(basename "$0" | sed -e 's/-/ /')
usage() {
die "usage: $dashless $USAGE"
}
if [ -z "$LONG_USAGE" ]
then
LONG_USAGE="usage: $dashless $USAGE"
else
LONG_USAGE="usage: $dashless $USAGE
$LONG_USAGE"
fi
case "$1" in
-h)
echo "$LONG_USAGE"
exit
esac
fi
# Set the name of the end-user facing command in the reflog when the
# script may update refs. When GIT_REFLOG_ACTION is already set, this
# will not overwrite it, so that a scripted Porcelain (e.g. "git
# rebase") can set it to its own name (e.g. "rebase") and then call
# another scripted Porcelain (e.g. "git am") and a call to this
# function in the latter will keep the name of the end-user facing
# program (e.g. "rebase") in GIT_REFLOG_ACTION, ensuring whatever it
# does will be record as actions done as part of the end-user facing
# operation (e.g. "rebase").
#
# NOTE NOTE NOTE: consequently, after assigning a specific message to
# GIT_REFLOG_ACTION when calling a "git" command to record a custom
# reflog message, do not leave that custom value in GIT_REFLOG_ACTION,
# after you are done. Other callers of "git" commands that rely on
# writing the default "program name" in reflog expect the variable to
# contain the value set by this function.
#
# To use a custom reflog message, do either one of these three:
#
# (a) use a single-shot export form:
# GIT_REFLOG_ACTION="$GIT_REFLOG_ACTION: preparing frotz" \
# git command-that-updates-a-ref
#
# (b) save the original away and restore:
# SAVED_ACTION=$GIT_REFLOG_ACTION
# GIT_REFLOG_ACTION="$GIT_REFLOG_ACTION: preparing frotz"
# git command-that-updates-a-ref
# GIT_REFLOG_ACITON=$SAVED_ACTION
#
# (c) assign the variable in a subshell:
# (
# GIT_REFLOG_ACTION="$GIT_REFLOG_ACTION: preparing frotz"
# git command-that-updates-a-ref
# )
set_reflog_action() {
if [ -z "${GIT_REFLOG_ACTION:+set}" ]
then
GIT_REFLOG_ACTION="$*"
export GIT_REFLOG_ACTION
fi
}
git_editor() {
if test -z "${GIT_EDITOR:+set}"
then
GIT_EDITOR="$(git var GIT_EDITOR)" || return $?
fi
eval "$GIT_EDITOR" '"$@"'
}
git_pager() {
if test -t 1
then
GIT_PAGER=$(git var GIT_PAGER)
else
GIT_PAGER=cat
fi
: ${LESS=-FRSX}
export LESS
eval "$GIT_PAGER" '"$@"'
}
sane_grep () {
GREP_OPTIONS= LC_ALL=C grep "$@"
}
sane_egrep () {
GREP_OPTIONS= LC_ALL=C egrep "$@"
}
is_bare_repository () {
git rev-parse --is-bare-repository
}
cd_to_toplevel () {
cdup=$(git rev-parse --show-toplevel) &&
cd "$cdup" || {
echo >&2 "Cannot chdir to $cdup, the toplevel of the working tree"
exit 1
}
}
require_work_tree_exists () {
if test "z$(git rev-parse --is-bare-repository)" != zfalse
then
die "fatal: $0 cannot be used without a working tree."
fi
}
require_work_tree () {
test "$(git rev-parse --is-inside-work-tree 2>/dev/null)" = true ||
die "fatal: $0 cannot be used without a working tree."
}
require_clean_work_tree () {
git rev-parse --verify HEAD >/dev/null || exit 1
git update-index -q --ignore-submodules --refresh
err=0
if ! git diff-files --quiet --ignore-submodules
then
echo >&2 "Cannot $1: You have unstaged changes."
err=1
fi
if ! git diff-index --cached --quiet --ignore-submodules HEAD --
then
if [ $err = 0 ]
then
echo >&2 "Cannot $1: Your index contains uncommitted changes."
else
echo >&2 "Additionally, your index contains uncommitted changes."
fi
err=1
fi
if [ $err = 1 ]
then
test -n "$2" && echo >&2 "$2"
exit 1
fi
}
# Generate a sed script to parse identities from a commit.
#
# Reads the commit from stdin, which should be in raw format (e.g., from
# cat-file or "--pretty=raw").
#
# The first argument specifies the ident line to parse (e.g., "author"), and
# the second specifies the environment variable to put it in (e.g., "AUTHOR"
# for "GIT_AUTHOR_*"). Multiple pairs can be given to parse author and
# committer.
pick_ident_script () {
while test $# -gt 0
do
lid=$1; shift
uid=$1; shift
printf '%s' "
/^$lid /{
s/'/'\\\\''/g
h
s/^$lid "'\([^<]*\) <[^>]*> .*$/\1/'"
s/.*/GIT_${uid}_NAME='&'/p
g
s/^$lid "'[^<]* <\([^>]*\)> .*$/\1/'"
s/.*/GIT_${uid}_EMAIL='&'/p
g
s/^$lid "'[^<]* <[^>]*> \(.*\)$/@\1/'"
s/.*/GIT_${uid}_DATE='&'/p
}
"
done
echo '/^$/q'
}
# Create a pick-script as above and feed it to sed. Stdout is suitable for
# feeding to eval.
parse_ident_from_commit () {
LANG=C LC_ALL=C sed -ne "$(pick_ident_script "$@")"
}
# Parse the author from a commit given as an argument. Stdout is suitable for
# feeding to eval to set the usual GIT_* ident variables.
get_author_ident_from_commit () {
encoding=$(git config i18n.commitencoding || echo UTF-8)
git show -s --pretty=raw --encoding="$encoding" "$1" -- |
parse_ident_from_commit author AUTHOR
}
# Clear repo-local GIT_* environment variables. Useful when switching to
# another repository (e.g. when entering a submodule). See also the env
# list in git_connect()
clear_local_git_env() {
unset $(git rev-parse --local-env-vars)
}
# Generate a virtual base file for a two-file merge. Uses git apply to
# remove lines from $1 that are not in $2, leaving only common lines.
create_virtual_base() {
sz0=$(wc -c <"$1")
@@DIFF@@ -u -La/"$1" -Lb/"$1" "$1" "$2" | git apply --no-add
sz1=$(wc -c <"$1")
# If we do not have enough common material, it is not
# worth trying two-file merge using common subsections.
expr $sz0 \< $sz1 \* 2 >/dev/null || : >"$1"
}
# Platform specific tweaks to work around some commands
case $(uname -s) in
*MINGW*)
# Windows has its own (incompatible) sort and find
sort () {
/usr/bin/sort "$@"
}
find () {
/usr/bin/find "$@"
}
# Let pwd always return the uniqe real windows path
alias pwd='pwd -W'
is_absolute_path () {
case "$1" in
[/\\]* | [A-Za-z]:*)
return 0 ;;
esac
return 1
}
;;
*)
is_absolute_path () {
case "$1" in
/*)
return 0 ;;
esac
return 1
}
esac
# Make sure we are in a valid repository of a vintage we understand,
# if we require to be in a git repository.
if test -z "$NONGIT_OK"
then
GIT_DIR=$(git rev-parse --git-dir) || exit
if [ -z "$SUBDIRECTORY_OK" ]
then
test -z "$(git rev-parse --show-cdup)" || {
exit=$?
echo >&2 "You need to run this command from the toplevel of the working tree."
exit $exit
}
fi
test -n "$GIT_DIR" && GIT_DIR=$(cd "$GIT_DIR" && pwd) || {
echo >&2 "Unable to determine absolute path of git directory"
exit 1
}
: ${GIT_OBJECT_DIRECTORY="$GIT_DIR/objects"}
fi
peel_committish () {
case "$1" in
:/*)
peeltmp=$(git rev-parse --verify "$1") &&
git rev-parse --verify "${peeltmp}^0"
;;
*)
git rev-parse --verify "${1}^0"
;;
esac
}