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#!/usr/bin/perl
20 years ago
# gitweb - simple web interface to track changes in git repositories
20 years ago
#
# (C) 2005-2006, Kay Sievers <kay.sievers@vrfy.org>
# (C) 2005, Christian Gierke
20 years ago
#
# This program is licensed under the GPLv2
use strict;
use warnings;
20 years ago
use CGI qw(:standard :escapeHTML -nosticky);
20 years ago
use CGI::Util qw(unescape);
use CGI::Carp qw(fatalsToBrowser);
use Encode;
20 years ago
use Fcntl ':mode';
use File::Find qw();
use File::Basename qw(basename);
binmode STDOUT, ':utf8';
BEGIN {
CGI->compile() if $ENV{'MOD_PERL'};
}
our $cgi = new CGI;
our $version = "++GIT_VERSION++";
our $my_url = $cgi->url();
our $my_uri = $cgi->url(-absolute => 1);
20 years ago
# if we're called with PATH_INFO, we have to strip that
# from the URL to find our real URL
# we make $path_info global because it's also used later on
our $path_info = $ENV{"PATH_INFO"};
if ($path_info) {
$my_url =~ s,\Q$path_info\E$,,;
$my_uri =~ s,\Q$path_info\E$,,;
}
# core git executable to use
# this can just be "git" if your webserver has a sensible PATH
our $GIT = "++GIT_BINDIR++/git";
20 years ago
# absolute fs-path which will be prepended to the project path
#our $projectroot = "/pub/scm";
our $projectroot = "++GITWEB_PROJECTROOT++";
20 years ago
# fs traversing limit for getting project list
# the number is relative to the projectroot
our $project_maxdepth = "++GITWEB_PROJECT_MAXDEPTH++";
20 years ago
# target of the home link on top of all pages
our $home_link = $my_uri || "/";
20 years ago
# string of the home link on top of all pages
our $home_link_str = "++GITWEB_HOME_LINK_STR++";
# name of your site or organization to appear in page titles
# replace this with something more descriptive for clearer bookmarks
our $site_name = "++GITWEB_SITENAME++"
|| ($ENV{'SERVER_NAME'} || "Untitled") . " Git";
# filename of html text to include at top of each page
our $site_header = "++GITWEB_SITE_HEADER++";
20 years ago
# html text to include at home page
our $home_text = "++GITWEB_HOMETEXT++";
# filename of html text to include at bottom of each page
our $site_footer = "++GITWEB_SITE_FOOTER++";
# URI of stylesheets
our @stylesheets = ("++GITWEB_CSS++");
# URI of a single stylesheet, which can be overridden in GITWEB_CONFIG.
our $stylesheet = undef;
# URI of GIT logo (72x27 size)
our $logo = "++GITWEB_LOGO++";
# URI of GIT favicon, assumed to be image/png type
our $favicon = "++GITWEB_FAVICON++";
# URI and label (title) of GIT logo link
#our $logo_url = "http://www.kernel.org/pub/software/scm/git/docs/";
#our $logo_label = "git documentation";
our $logo_url = "http://git.or.cz/";
our $logo_label = "git homepage";
20 years ago
# source of projects list
our $projects_list = "++GITWEB_LIST++";
20 years ago
# the width (in characters) of the projects list "Description" column
our $projects_list_description_width = 25;
# default order of projects list
# valid values are none, project, descr, owner, and age
our $default_projects_order = "project";
# show repository only if this file exists
# (only effective if this variable evaluates to true)
our $export_ok = "++GITWEB_EXPORT_OK++";
# show repository only if this subroutine returns true
# when given the path to the project, for example:
# sub { return -e "$_[0]/git-daemon-export-ok"; }
our $export_auth_hook = undef;
# only allow viewing of repositories also shown on the overview page
our $strict_export = "++GITWEB_STRICT_EXPORT++";
# list of git base URLs used for URL to where fetch project from,
# i.e. full URL is "$git_base_url/$project"
our @git_base_url_list = grep { $_ ne '' } ("++GITWEB_BASE_URL++");
# default blob_plain mimetype and default charset for text/plain blob
our $default_blob_plain_mimetype = 'text/plain';
our $default_text_plain_charset = undef;
# file to use for guessing MIME types before trying /etc/mime.types
# (relative to the current git repository)
our $mimetypes_file = undef;
# assume this charset if line contains non-UTF-8 characters;
# it should be valid encoding (see Encoding::Supported(3pm) for list),
# for which encoding all byte sequences are valid, for example
# 'iso-8859-1' aka 'latin1' (it is decoded without checking, so it
# could be even 'utf-8' for the old behavior)
our $fallback_encoding = 'latin1';
# rename detection options for git-diff and git-diff-tree
# - default is '-M', with the cost proportional to
# (number of removed files) * (number of new files).
# - more costly is '-C' (which implies '-M'), with the cost proportional to
# (number of changed files + number of removed files) * (number of new files)
# - even more costly is '-C', '--find-copies-harder' with cost
# (number of files in the original tree) * (number of new files)
# - one might want to include '-B' option, e.g. '-B', '-M'
our @diff_opts = ('-M'); # taken from git_commit
gitweb: snapshot cleanups & support for offering multiple formats - Centralize knowledge about snapshot formats (mime types, extensions, commands) in %known_snapshot_formats and improve how some of that information is specified. In particular, zip files are no longer a special case. - Add support for offering multiple snapshot formats to the user so that he/she can download a snapshot in the format he/she prefers. The site-wide or project configuration now gives a list of formats to offer, and if more than one format is offered, the "_snapshot_" link becomes something like "snapshot (_tar.bz2_ _zip_)". - If only one format is offered, a tooltip on the "_snapshot_" link tells the user what it is. - Fix out-of-date "tarball" -> "archive" in comment. Alert for gitweb site administrators: This patch changes the format of $feature{'snapshot'}{'default'} in gitweb_config.perl from a list of three pieces of information about a single format to a list of one or more formats you wish to offer from the set ('tgz', 'tbz2', 'zip'). Update your gitweb_config.perl appropriately. There was taken care for old-style gitweb configuration to work as it used to, but this backward compatibility works only for the values which correspond to gitweb.snapshot values of 'gzip', 'bzip2' and 'zip', i.e. ['x-gzip', 'gz', 'gzip'] ['x-bzip2', 'bz2', 'bzip2'] ['x-zip', 'zip', ''] The preferred names for gitweb.snapshot in repository configuration have also changed from 'gzip' and 'bzip2' to 'tgz' and 'tbz2', but the old names are still recognized for compatibility. Signed-off-by: Matt McCutchen <hashproduct@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
18 years ago
# information about snapshot formats that gitweb is capable of serving
our %known_snapshot_formats = (
# name => {
# 'display' => display name,
# 'type' => mime type,
# 'suffix' => filename suffix,
# 'format' => --format for git-archive,
# 'compressor' => [compressor command and arguments]
# (array reference, optional)}
#
'tgz' => {
'display' => 'tar.gz',
'type' => 'application/x-gzip',
'suffix' => '.tar.gz',
'format' => 'tar',
'compressor' => ['gzip']},
'tbz2' => {
'display' => 'tar.bz2',
'type' => 'application/x-bzip2',
'suffix' => '.tar.bz2',
'format' => 'tar',
'compressor' => ['bzip2']},
'zip' => {
'display' => 'zip',
'type' => 'application/x-zip',
'suffix' => '.zip',
'format' => 'zip'},
);
# Aliases so we understand old gitweb.snapshot values in repository
# configuration.
our %known_snapshot_format_aliases = (
'gzip' => 'tgz',
'bzip2' => 'tbz2',
# backward compatibility: legacy gitweb config support
'x-gzip' => undef, 'gz' => undef,
'x-bzip2' => undef, 'bz2' => undef,
'x-zip' => undef, '' => undef,
);
# You define site-wide feature defaults here; override them with
# $GITWEB_CONFIG as necessary.
our %feature = (
# feature => {
# 'sub' => feature-sub (subroutine),
# 'override' => allow-override (boolean),
# 'default' => [ default options...] (array reference)}
#
# if feature is overridable (it means that allow-override has true value),
# then feature-sub will be called with default options as parameters;
# return value of feature-sub indicates if to enable specified feature
#
# if there is no 'sub' key (no feature-sub), then feature cannot be
# overriden
#
# use gitweb_get_feature(<feature>) to retrieve the <feature> value
# (an array) or gitweb_check_feature(<feature>) to check if <feature>
# is enabled
# Enable the 'blame' blob view, showing the last commit that modified
# each line in the file. This can be very CPU-intensive.
# To enable system wide have in $GITWEB_CONFIG
# $feature{'blame'}{'default'} = [1];
# To have project specific config enable override in $GITWEB_CONFIG
# $feature{'blame'}{'override'} = 1;
# and in project config gitweb.blame = 0|1;
'blame' => {
'sub' => \&feature_blame,
'override' => 0,
'default' => [0]},
gitweb: snapshot cleanups & support for offering multiple formats - Centralize knowledge about snapshot formats (mime types, extensions, commands) in %known_snapshot_formats and improve how some of that information is specified. In particular, zip files are no longer a special case. - Add support for offering multiple snapshot formats to the user so that he/she can download a snapshot in the format he/she prefers. The site-wide or project configuration now gives a list of formats to offer, and if more than one format is offered, the "_snapshot_" link becomes something like "snapshot (_tar.bz2_ _zip_)". - If only one format is offered, a tooltip on the "_snapshot_" link tells the user what it is. - Fix out-of-date "tarball" -> "archive" in comment. Alert for gitweb site administrators: This patch changes the format of $feature{'snapshot'}{'default'} in gitweb_config.perl from a list of three pieces of information about a single format to a list of one or more formats you wish to offer from the set ('tgz', 'tbz2', 'zip'). Update your gitweb_config.perl appropriately. There was taken care for old-style gitweb configuration to work as it used to, but this backward compatibility works only for the values which correspond to gitweb.snapshot values of 'gzip', 'bzip2' and 'zip', i.e. ['x-gzip', 'gz', 'gzip'] ['x-bzip2', 'bz2', 'bzip2'] ['x-zip', 'zip', ''] The preferred names for gitweb.snapshot in repository configuration have also changed from 'gzip' and 'bzip2' to 'tgz' and 'tbz2', but the old names are still recognized for compatibility. Signed-off-by: Matt McCutchen <hashproduct@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
18 years ago
# Enable the 'snapshot' link, providing a compressed archive of any
# tree. This can potentially generate high traffic if you have large
# project.
gitweb: snapshot cleanups & support for offering multiple formats - Centralize knowledge about snapshot formats (mime types, extensions, commands) in %known_snapshot_formats and improve how some of that information is specified. In particular, zip files are no longer a special case. - Add support for offering multiple snapshot formats to the user so that he/she can download a snapshot in the format he/she prefers. The site-wide or project configuration now gives a list of formats to offer, and if more than one format is offered, the "_snapshot_" link becomes something like "snapshot (_tar.bz2_ _zip_)". - If only one format is offered, a tooltip on the "_snapshot_" link tells the user what it is. - Fix out-of-date "tarball" -> "archive" in comment. Alert for gitweb site administrators: This patch changes the format of $feature{'snapshot'}{'default'} in gitweb_config.perl from a list of three pieces of information about a single format to a list of one or more formats you wish to offer from the set ('tgz', 'tbz2', 'zip'). Update your gitweb_config.perl appropriately. There was taken care for old-style gitweb configuration to work as it used to, but this backward compatibility works only for the values which correspond to gitweb.snapshot values of 'gzip', 'bzip2' and 'zip', i.e. ['x-gzip', 'gz', 'gzip'] ['x-bzip2', 'bz2', 'bzip2'] ['x-zip', 'zip', ''] The preferred names for gitweb.snapshot in repository configuration have also changed from 'gzip' and 'bzip2' to 'tgz' and 'tbz2', but the old names are still recognized for compatibility. Signed-off-by: Matt McCutchen <hashproduct@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
18 years ago
# Value is a list of formats defined in %known_snapshot_formats that
# you wish to offer.
# To disable system wide have in $GITWEB_CONFIG
gitweb: snapshot cleanups & support for offering multiple formats - Centralize knowledge about snapshot formats (mime types, extensions, commands) in %known_snapshot_formats and improve how some of that information is specified. In particular, zip files are no longer a special case. - Add support for offering multiple snapshot formats to the user so that he/she can download a snapshot in the format he/she prefers. The site-wide or project configuration now gives a list of formats to offer, and if more than one format is offered, the "_snapshot_" link becomes something like "snapshot (_tar.bz2_ _zip_)". - If only one format is offered, a tooltip on the "_snapshot_" link tells the user what it is. - Fix out-of-date "tarball" -> "archive" in comment. Alert for gitweb site administrators: This patch changes the format of $feature{'snapshot'}{'default'} in gitweb_config.perl from a list of three pieces of information about a single format to a list of one or more formats you wish to offer from the set ('tgz', 'tbz2', 'zip'). Update your gitweb_config.perl appropriately. There was taken care for old-style gitweb configuration to work as it used to, but this backward compatibility works only for the values which correspond to gitweb.snapshot values of 'gzip', 'bzip2' and 'zip', i.e. ['x-gzip', 'gz', 'gzip'] ['x-bzip2', 'bz2', 'bzip2'] ['x-zip', 'zip', ''] The preferred names for gitweb.snapshot in repository configuration have also changed from 'gzip' and 'bzip2' to 'tgz' and 'tbz2', but the old names are still recognized for compatibility. Signed-off-by: Matt McCutchen <hashproduct@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
18 years ago
# $feature{'snapshot'}{'default'} = [];
# To have project specific config enable override in $GITWEB_CONFIG
# $feature{'snapshot'}{'override'} = 1;
gitweb: snapshot cleanups & support for offering multiple formats - Centralize knowledge about snapshot formats (mime types, extensions, commands) in %known_snapshot_formats and improve how some of that information is specified. In particular, zip files are no longer a special case. - Add support for offering multiple snapshot formats to the user so that he/she can download a snapshot in the format he/she prefers. The site-wide or project configuration now gives a list of formats to offer, and if more than one format is offered, the "_snapshot_" link becomes something like "snapshot (_tar.bz2_ _zip_)". - If only one format is offered, a tooltip on the "_snapshot_" link tells the user what it is. - Fix out-of-date "tarball" -> "archive" in comment. Alert for gitweb site administrators: This patch changes the format of $feature{'snapshot'}{'default'} in gitweb_config.perl from a list of three pieces of information about a single format to a list of one or more formats you wish to offer from the set ('tgz', 'tbz2', 'zip'). Update your gitweb_config.perl appropriately. There was taken care for old-style gitweb configuration to work as it used to, but this backward compatibility works only for the values which correspond to gitweb.snapshot values of 'gzip', 'bzip2' and 'zip', i.e. ['x-gzip', 'gz', 'gzip'] ['x-bzip2', 'bz2', 'bzip2'] ['x-zip', 'zip', ''] The preferred names for gitweb.snapshot in repository configuration have also changed from 'gzip' and 'bzip2' to 'tgz' and 'tbz2', but the old names are still recognized for compatibility. Signed-off-by: Matt McCutchen <hashproduct@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
18 years ago
# and in project config, a comma-separated list of formats or "none"
# to disable. Example: gitweb.snapshot = tbz2,zip;
'snapshot' => {
'sub' => \&feature_snapshot,
'override' => 0,
gitweb: snapshot cleanups & support for offering multiple formats - Centralize knowledge about snapshot formats (mime types, extensions, commands) in %known_snapshot_formats and improve how some of that information is specified. In particular, zip files are no longer a special case. - Add support for offering multiple snapshot formats to the user so that he/she can download a snapshot in the format he/she prefers. The site-wide or project configuration now gives a list of formats to offer, and if more than one format is offered, the "_snapshot_" link becomes something like "snapshot (_tar.bz2_ _zip_)". - If only one format is offered, a tooltip on the "_snapshot_" link tells the user what it is. - Fix out-of-date "tarball" -> "archive" in comment. Alert for gitweb site administrators: This patch changes the format of $feature{'snapshot'}{'default'} in gitweb_config.perl from a list of three pieces of information about a single format to a list of one or more formats you wish to offer from the set ('tgz', 'tbz2', 'zip'). Update your gitweb_config.perl appropriately. There was taken care for old-style gitweb configuration to work as it used to, but this backward compatibility works only for the values which correspond to gitweb.snapshot values of 'gzip', 'bzip2' and 'zip', i.e. ['x-gzip', 'gz', 'gzip'] ['x-bzip2', 'bz2', 'bzip2'] ['x-zip', 'zip', ''] The preferred names for gitweb.snapshot in repository configuration have also changed from 'gzip' and 'bzip2' to 'tgz' and 'tbz2', but the old names are still recognized for compatibility. Signed-off-by: Matt McCutchen <hashproduct@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
18 years ago
'default' => ['tgz']},
# Enable text search, which will list the commits which match author,
# committer or commit text to a given string. Enabled by default.
# Project specific override is not supported.
'search' => {
'override' => 0,
'default' => [1]},
# Enable grep search, which will list the files in currently selected
# tree containing the given string. Enabled by default. This can be
# potentially CPU-intensive, of course.
# To enable system wide have in $GITWEB_CONFIG
# $feature{'grep'}{'default'} = [1];
# To have project specific config enable override in $GITWEB_CONFIG
# $feature{'grep'}{'override'} = 1;
# and in project config gitweb.grep = 0|1;
'grep' => {
'sub' => \&feature_grep,
'override' => 0,
'default' => [1]},
# Enable the pickaxe search, which will list the commits that modified
# a given string in a file. This can be practical and quite faster
# alternative to 'blame', but still potentially CPU-intensive.
# To enable system wide have in $GITWEB_CONFIG
# $feature{'pickaxe'}{'default'} = [1];
# To have project specific config enable override in $GITWEB_CONFIG
# $feature{'pickaxe'}{'override'} = 1;
# and in project config gitweb.pickaxe = 0|1;
'pickaxe' => {
'sub' => \&feature_pickaxe,
'override' => 0,
'default' => [1]},
# Make gitweb use an alternative format of the URLs which can be
# more readable and natural-looking: project name is embedded
# directly in the path and the query string contains other
# auxiliary information. All gitweb installations recognize
# URL in either format; this configures in which formats gitweb
# generates links.
# To enable system wide have in $GITWEB_CONFIG
# $feature{'pathinfo'}{'default'} = [1];
# Project specific override is not supported.
# Note that you will need to change the default location of CSS,
# favicon, logo and possibly other files to an absolute URL. Also,
# if gitweb.cgi serves as your indexfile, you will need to force
# $my_uri to contain the script name in your $GITWEB_CONFIG.
'pathinfo' => {
'override' => 0,
'default' => [0]},
# Make gitweb consider projects in project root subdirectories
# to be forks of existing projects. Given project $projname.git,
# projects matching $projname/*.git will not be shown in the main
# projects list, instead a '+' mark will be added to $projname
# there and a 'forks' view will be enabled for the project, listing
# all the forks. If project list is taken from a file, forks have
# to be listed after the main project.
# To enable system wide have in $GITWEB_CONFIG
# $feature{'forks'}{'default'} = [1];
# Project specific override is not supported.
'forks' => {
'override' => 0,
'default' => [0]},
# Insert custom links to the action bar of all project pages.
# This enables you mainly to link to third-party scripts integrating
# into gitweb; e.g. git-browser for graphical history representation
# or custom web-based repository administration interface.
# The 'default' value consists of a list of triplets in the form
# (label, link, position) where position is the label after which
# to insert the link and link is a format string where %n expands
# to the project name, %f to the project path within the filesystem,
# %h to the current hash (h gitweb parameter) and %b to the current
# hash base (hb gitweb parameter); %% expands to %.
# To enable system wide have in $GITWEB_CONFIG e.g.
# $feature{'actions'}{'default'} = [('graphiclog',
# '/git-browser/by-commit.html?r=%n', 'summary')];
# Project specific override is not supported.
'actions' => {
'override' => 0,
'default' => []},
# Allow gitweb scan project content tags described in ctags/
# of project repository, and display the popular Web 2.0-ish
# "tag cloud" near the project list. Note that this is something
# COMPLETELY different from the normal Git tags.
# gitweb by itself can show existing tags, but it does not handle
# tagging itself; you need an external application for that.
# For an example script, check Girocco's cgi/tagproj.cgi.
# You may want to install the HTML::TagCloud Perl module to get
# a pretty tag cloud instead of just a list of tags.
# To enable system wide have in $GITWEB_CONFIG
# $feature{'ctags'}{'default'} = ['path_to_tag_script'];
# Project specific override is not supported.
'ctags' => {
'override' => 0,
'default' => [0]},
);
sub gitweb_get_feature {
my ($name) = @_;
return unless exists $feature{$name};
my ($sub, $override, @defaults) = (
$feature{$name}{'sub'},
$feature{$name}{'override'},
@{$feature{$name}{'default'}});
if (!$override) { return @defaults; }
if (!defined $sub) {
warn "feature $name is not overrideable";
return @defaults;
}
return $sub->(@defaults);
}
# A wrapper to check if a given feature is enabled.
# With this, you can say
#
# my $bool_feat = gitweb_check_feature('bool_feat');
# gitweb_check_feature('bool_feat') or somecode;
#
# instead of
#
# my ($bool_feat) = gitweb_get_feature('bool_feat');
# (gitweb_get_feature('bool_feat'))[0] or somecode;
#
sub gitweb_check_feature {
return (gitweb_get_feature(@_))[0];
}
sub feature_blame {
my ($val) = git_get_project_config('blame', '--bool');
if ($val eq 'true') {
return 1;
} elsif ($val eq 'false') {
return 0;
}
return $_[0];
}
sub feature_snapshot {
gitweb: snapshot cleanups & support for offering multiple formats - Centralize knowledge about snapshot formats (mime types, extensions, commands) in %known_snapshot_formats and improve how some of that information is specified. In particular, zip files are no longer a special case. - Add support for offering multiple snapshot formats to the user so that he/she can download a snapshot in the format he/she prefers. The site-wide or project configuration now gives a list of formats to offer, and if more than one format is offered, the "_snapshot_" link becomes something like "snapshot (_tar.bz2_ _zip_)". - If only one format is offered, a tooltip on the "_snapshot_" link tells the user what it is. - Fix out-of-date "tarball" -> "archive" in comment. Alert for gitweb site administrators: This patch changes the format of $feature{'snapshot'}{'default'} in gitweb_config.perl from a list of three pieces of information about a single format to a list of one or more formats you wish to offer from the set ('tgz', 'tbz2', 'zip'). Update your gitweb_config.perl appropriately. There was taken care for old-style gitweb configuration to work as it used to, but this backward compatibility works only for the values which correspond to gitweb.snapshot values of 'gzip', 'bzip2' and 'zip', i.e. ['x-gzip', 'gz', 'gzip'] ['x-bzip2', 'bz2', 'bzip2'] ['x-zip', 'zip', ''] The preferred names for gitweb.snapshot in repository configuration have also changed from 'gzip' and 'bzip2' to 'tgz' and 'tbz2', but the old names are still recognized for compatibility. Signed-off-by: Matt McCutchen <hashproduct@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
18 years ago
my (@fmts) = @_;
my ($val) = git_get_project_config('snapshot');
gitweb: snapshot cleanups & support for offering multiple formats - Centralize knowledge about snapshot formats (mime types, extensions, commands) in %known_snapshot_formats and improve how some of that information is specified. In particular, zip files are no longer a special case. - Add support for offering multiple snapshot formats to the user so that he/she can download a snapshot in the format he/she prefers. The site-wide or project configuration now gives a list of formats to offer, and if more than one format is offered, the "_snapshot_" link becomes something like "snapshot (_tar.bz2_ _zip_)". - If only one format is offered, a tooltip on the "_snapshot_" link tells the user what it is. - Fix out-of-date "tarball" -> "archive" in comment. Alert for gitweb site administrators: This patch changes the format of $feature{'snapshot'}{'default'} in gitweb_config.perl from a list of three pieces of information about a single format to a list of one or more formats you wish to offer from the set ('tgz', 'tbz2', 'zip'). Update your gitweb_config.perl appropriately. There was taken care for old-style gitweb configuration to work as it used to, but this backward compatibility works only for the values which correspond to gitweb.snapshot values of 'gzip', 'bzip2' and 'zip', i.e. ['x-gzip', 'gz', 'gzip'] ['x-bzip2', 'bz2', 'bzip2'] ['x-zip', 'zip', ''] The preferred names for gitweb.snapshot in repository configuration have also changed from 'gzip' and 'bzip2' to 'tgz' and 'tbz2', but the old names are still recognized for compatibility. Signed-off-by: Matt McCutchen <hashproduct@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
18 years ago
if ($val) {
@fmts = ($val eq 'none' ? () : split /\s*[,\s]\s*/, $val);
}
gitweb: snapshot cleanups & support for offering multiple formats - Centralize knowledge about snapshot formats (mime types, extensions, commands) in %known_snapshot_formats and improve how some of that information is specified. In particular, zip files are no longer a special case. - Add support for offering multiple snapshot formats to the user so that he/she can download a snapshot in the format he/she prefers. The site-wide or project configuration now gives a list of formats to offer, and if more than one format is offered, the "_snapshot_" link becomes something like "snapshot (_tar.bz2_ _zip_)". - If only one format is offered, a tooltip on the "_snapshot_" link tells the user what it is. - Fix out-of-date "tarball" -> "archive" in comment. Alert for gitweb site administrators: This patch changes the format of $feature{'snapshot'}{'default'} in gitweb_config.perl from a list of three pieces of information about a single format to a list of one or more formats you wish to offer from the set ('tgz', 'tbz2', 'zip'). Update your gitweb_config.perl appropriately. There was taken care for old-style gitweb configuration to work as it used to, but this backward compatibility works only for the values which correspond to gitweb.snapshot values of 'gzip', 'bzip2' and 'zip', i.e. ['x-gzip', 'gz', 'gzip'] ['x-bzip2', 'bz2', 'bzip2'] ['x-zip', 'zip', ''] The preferred names for gitweb.snapshot in repository configuration have also changed from 'gzip' and 'bzip2' to 'tgz' and 'tbz2', but the old names are still recognized for compatibility. Signed-off-by: Matt McCutchen <hashproduct@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
18 years ago
return @fmts;
}
sub feature_grep {
my ($val) = git_get_project_config('grep', '--bool');
if ($val eq 'true') {
return (1);
} elsif ($val eq 'false') {
return (0);
}
return ($_[0]);
}
sub feature_pickaxe {
my ($val) = git_get_project_config('pickaxe', '--bool');
if ($val eq 'true') {
return (1);
} elsif ($val eq 'false') {
return (0);
}
return ($_[0]);
}
# checking HEAD file with -e is fragile if the repository was
# initialized long time ago (i.e. symlink HEAD) and was pack-ref'ed
# and then pruned.
sub check_head_link {
my ($dir) = @_;
my $headfile = "$dir/HEAD";
return ((-e $headfile) ||
(-l $headfile && readlink($headfile) =~ /^refs\/heads\//));
}
sub check_export_ok {
my ($dir) = @_;
return (check_head_link($dir) &&
(!$export_ok || -e "$dir/$export_ok") &&
(!$export_auth_hook || $export_auth_hook->($dir)));
}
# process alternate names for backward compatibility
# filter out unsupported (unknown) snapshot formats
sub filter_snapshot_fmts {
my @fmts = @_;
@fmts = map {
exists $known_snapshot_format_aliases{$_} ?
$known_snapshot_format_aliases{$_} : $_} @fmts;
@fmts = grep(exists $known_snapshot_formats{$_}, @fmts);
}
our $GITWEB_CONFIG = $ENV{'GITWEB_CONFIG'} || "++GITWEB_CONFIG++";
if (-e $GITWEB_CONFIG) {
do $GITWEB_CONFIG;
} else {
our $GITWEB_CONFIG_SYSTEM = $ENV{'GITWEB_CONFIG_SYSTEM'} || "++GITWEB_CONFIG_SYSTEM++";
do $GITWEB_CONFIG_SYSTEM if -e $GITWEB_CONFIG_SYSTEM;
}
# version of the core git binary
our $git_version = qx("$GIT" --version) =~ m/git version (.*)$/ ? $1 : "unknown";
$projects_list ||= $projectroot;
# ======================================================================
20 years ago
# input validation and dispatch
# input parameters can be collected from a variety of sources (presently, CGI
# and PATH_INFO), so we define an %input_params hash that collects them all
# together during validation: this allows subsequent uses (e.g. href()) to be
# agnostic of the parameter origin
our %input_params = ();
# input parameters are stored with the long parameter name as key. This will
# also be used in the href subroutine to convert parameters to their CGI
# equivalent, and since the href() usage is the most frequent one, we store
# the name -> CGI key mapping here, instead of the reverse.
#
# XXX: Warning: If you touch this, check the search form for updating,
# too.
our @cgi_param_mapping = (
project => "p",
action => "a",
file_name => "f",
file_parent => "fp",
hash => "h",
hash_parent => "hp",
hash_base => "hb",
hash_parent_base => "hpb",
page => "pg",
order => "o",
searchtext => "s",
searchtype => "st",
snapshot_format => "sf",
extra_options => "opt",
search_use_regexp => "sr",
);
our %cgi_param_mapping = @cgi_param_mapping;
# we will also need to know the possible actions, for validation
our %actions = (
"blame" => \&git_blame,
"blobdiff" => \&git_blobdiff,
"blobdiff_plain" => \&git_blobdiff_plain,
"blob" => \&git_blob,
"blob_plain" => \&git_blob_plain,
"commitdiff" => \&git_commitdiff,
"commitdiff_plain" => \&git_commitdiff_plain,
"commit" => \&git_commit,
"forks" => \&git_forks,
"heads" => \&git_heads,
"history" => \&git_history,
"log" => \&git_log,
"rss" => \&git_rss,
"atom" => \&git_atom,
"search" => \&git_search,
"search_help" => \&git_search_help,
"shortlog" => \&git_shortlog,
"summary" => \&git_summary,
"tag" => \&git_tag,
"tags" => \&git_tags,
"tree" => \&git_tree,
"snapshot" => \&git_snapshot,
"object" => \&git_object,
# those below don't need $project
"opml" => \&git_opml,
"project_list" => \&git_project_list,
"project_index" => \&git_project_index,
);
# finally, we have the hash of allowed extra_options for the commands that
# allow them
our %allowed_options = (
"--no-merges" => [ qw(rss atom log shortlog history) ],
);
# fill %input_params with the CGI parameters. All values except for 'opt'
# should be single values, but opt can be an array. We should probably
# build an array of parameters that can be multi-valued, but since for the time
# being it's only this one, we just single it out
while (my ($name, $symbol) = each %cgi_param_mapping) {
if ($symbol eq 'opt') {
$input_params{$name} = [ $cgi->param($symbol) ];
} else {
$input_params{$name} = $cgi->param($symbol);
}
}
# now read PATH_INFO and update the parameter list for missing parameters
sub evaluate_path_info {
return if defined $input_params{'project'};
return if !$path_info;
$path_info =~ s,^/+,,;
return if !$path_info;
# find which part of PATH_INFO is project
my $project = $path_info;
$project =~ s,/+$,,;
while ($project && !check_head_link("$projectroot/$project")) {
$project =~ s,/*[^/]*$,,;
}
return unless $project;
$input_params{'project'} = $project;
# do not change any parameters if an action is given using the query string
return if $input_params{'action'};
$path_info =~ s,^\Q$project\E/*,,;
# next, check if we have an action
my $action = $path_info;
$action =~ s,/.*$,,;
if (exists $actions{$action}) {
$path_info =~ s,^$action/*,,;
$input_params{'action'} = $action;
}
# list of actions that want hash_base instead of hash, but can have no
# pathname (f) parameter
my @wants_base = (
'tree',
'history',
);
# we want to catch
# [$hash_parent_base[:$file_parent]..]$hash_parent[:$file_name]
my ($parentrefname, $parentpathname, $refname, $pathname) =
($path_info =~ /^(?:(.+?)(?::(.+))?\.\.)?(.+?)(?::(.+))?$/);
# first, analyze the 'current' part
if (defined $pathname) {
# we got "branch:filename" or "branch:dir/"
# we could use git_get_type(branch:pathname), but:
# - it needs $git_dir
# - it does a git() call
# - the convention of terminating directories with a slash
# makes it superfluous
# - embedding the action in the PATH_INFO would make it even
# more superfluous
$pathname =~ s,^/+,,;
if (!$pathname || substr($pathname, -1) eq "/") {
$input_params{'action'} ||= "tree";
$pathname =~ s,/$,,;
} else {
# the default action depends on whether we had parent info
# or not
if ($parentrefname) {
$input_params{'action'} ||= "blobdiff_plain";
} else {
$input_params{'action'} ||= "blob_plain";
}
}
$input_params{'hash_base'} ||= $refname;
$input_params{'file_name'} ||= $pathname;
} elsif (defined $refname) {
# we got "branch". In this case we have to choose if we have to
# set hash or hash_base.
#
# Most of the actions without a pathname only want hash to be
# set, except for the ones specified in @wants_base that want
# hash_base instead. It should also be noted that hand-crafted
# links having 'history' as an action and no pathname or hash
# set will fail, but that happens regardless of PATH_INFO.
$input_params{'action'} ||= "shortlog";
if (grep { $_ eq $input_params{'action'} } @wants_base) {
$input_params{'hash_base'} ||= $refname;
} else {
$input_params{'hash'} ||= $refname;
}
}
# next, handle the 'parent' part, if present
if (defined $parentrefname) {
# a missing pathspec defaults to the 'current' filename, allowing e.g.
# someproject/blobdiff/oldrev..newrev:/filename
if ($parentpathname) {
$parentpathname =~ s,^/+,,;
$parentpathname =~ s,/$,,;
$input_params{'file_parent'} ||= $parentpathname;
} else {
$input_params{'file_parent'} ||= $input_params{'file_name'};
}
# we assume that hash_parent_base is wanted if a path was specified,
# or if the action wants hash_base instead of hash
if (defined $input_params{'file_parent'} ||
grep { $_ eq $input_params{'action'} } @wants_base) {
$input_params{'hash_parent_base'} ||= $parentrefname;
} else {
$input_params{'hash_parent'} ||= $parentrefname;
}
}
# for the snapshot action, we allow URLs in the form
# $project/snapshot/$hash.ext
# where .ext determines the snapshot and gets removed from the
# passed $refname to provide the $hash.
#
# To be able to tell that $refname includes the format extension, we
# require the following two conditions to be satisfied:
# - the hash input parameter MUST have been set from the $refname part
# of the URL (i.e. they must be equal)
# - the snapshot format MUST NOT have been defined already (e.g. from
# CGI parameter sf)
# It's also useless to try any matching unless $refname has a dot,
# so we check for that too
if (defined $input_params{'action'} &&
$input_params{'action'} eq 'snapshot' &&
defined $refname && index($refname, '.') != -1 &&
$refname eq $input_params{'hash'} &&
!defined $input_params{'snapshot_format'}) {
# We loop over the known snapshot formats, checking for
# extensions. Allowed extensions are both the defined suffix
# (which includes the initial dot already) and the snapshot
# format key itself, with a prepended dot
while (my ($fmt, %opt) = each %known_snapshot_formats) {
my $hash = $refname;
my $sfx;
$hash =~ s/(\Q$opt{'suffix'}\E|\Q.$fmt\E)$//;
next unless $sfx = $1;
# a valid suffix was found, so set the snapshot format
# and reset the hash parameter
$input_params{'snapshot_format'} = $fmt;
$input_params{'hash'} = $hash;
# we also set the format suffix to the one requested
# in the URL: this way a request for e.g. .tgz returns
# a .tgz instead of a .tar.gz
$known_snapshot_formats{$fmt}{'suffix'} = $sfx;
last;
}
}
}
evaluate_path_info();
our $action = $input_params{'action'};
20 years ago
if (defined $action) {
if (!validate_action($action)) {
die_error(400, "Invalid action parameter");
20 years ago
}
}
20 years ago
# parameters which are pathnames
our $project = $input_params{'project'};
if (defined $project) {
if (!validate_project($project)) {
undef $project;
die_error(404, "No such project");
20 years ago
}
20 years ago
}
20 years ago
our $file_name = $input_params{'file_name'};
if (defined $file_name) {
if (!validate_pathname($file_name)) {
die_error(400, "Invalid file parameter");
}
}
our $file_parent = $input_params{'file_parent'};
if (defined $file_parent) {
if (!validate_pathname($file_parent)) {
die_error(400, "Invalid file parent parameter");
}
}
# parameters which are refnames
our $hash = $input_params{'hash'};
20 years ago
if (defined $hash) {
if (!validate_refname($hash)) {
die_error(400, "Invalid hash parameter");
20 years ago
}
20 years ago
}
20 years ago
our $hash_parent = $input_params{'hash_parent'};
if (defined $hash_parent) {
if (!validate_refname($hash_parent)) {
die_error(400, "Invalid hash parent parameter");
}
20 years ago
}
our $hash_base = $input_params{'hash_base'};
if (defined $hash_base) {
if (!validate_refname($hash_base)) {
die_error(400, "Invalid hash base parameter");
}
20 years ago
}
20 years ago
our @extra_options = @{$input_params{'extra_options'}};
# @extra_options is always defined, since it can only be (currently) set from
# CGI, and $cgi->param() returns the empty array in array context if the param
# is not set
foreach my $opt (@extra_options) {
if (not exists $allowed_options{$opt}) {
die_error(400, "Invalid option parameter");
}
if (not grep(/^$action$/, @{$allowed_options{$opt}})) {
die_error(400, "Invalid option parameter for this action");
}
}
our $hash_parent_base = $input_params{'hash_parent_base'};
if (defined $hash_parent_base) {
if (!validate_refname($hash_parent_base)) {
die_error(400, "Invalid hash parent base parameter");
}
}
# other parameters
our $page = $input_params{'page'};
20 years ago
if (defined $page) {
if ($page =~ m/[^0-9]/) {
die_error(400, "Invalid page parameter");
20 years ago
}
}
20 years ago
our $searchtype = $input_params{'searchtype'};
if (defined $searchtype) {
if ($searchtype =~ m/[^a-z]/) {
die_error(400, "Invalid searchtype parameter");
}
}
our $search_use_regexp = $input_params{'search_use_regexp'};
our $searchtext = $input_params{'searchtext'};
our $search_regexp;
20 years ago
if (defined $searchtext) {
if (length($searchtext) < 2) {
die_error(403, "At least two characters are required for search parameter");
}
$search_regexp = $search_use_regexp ? $searchtext : quotemeta $searchtext;
20 years ago
}
# path to the current git repository
our $git_dir;
$git_dir = "$projectroot/$project" if $project;
# list of supported snapshot formats
our @snapshot_fmts = gitweb_get_feature('snapshot');
@snapshot_fmts = filter_snapshot_fmts(@snapshot_fmts);
# dispatch
if (!defined $action) {
if (defined $hash) {
$action = git_get_type($hash);
} elsif (defined $hash_base && defined $file_name) {
$action = git_get_type("$hash_base:$file_name");
} elsif (defined $project) {
$action = 'summary';
} else {
$action = 'project_list';
}
}
if (!defined($actions{$action})) {
die_error(400, "Unknown action");
20 years ago
}
if ($action !~ m/^(opml|project_list|project_index)$/ &&
!$project) {
die_error(400, "Project needed");
}
$actions{$action}->();
exit;
20 years ago
## ======================================================================
## action links
gitweb: Use feed link according to current view Michael G. Noll said in comments to the "Switching my code repository from Subversion (SVN) to git" article (http://tinyurl.com/37v67l) in his "My digital moleskine" blog, that one of the things he is missing in gitweb from SVN::Web is an RSS feed with news/information of the current view (including RSS feed for single file or directory). This is not exactly true, as since refactoring feed generation in af6feeb (gitweb: Refactor feed generation, make output prettier, add Atom feed, 2006-11-19), gitweb can generate feeds (RSS or Atom) for history of a given branch, history limited to a given directory, or history of a given file. Nevertheless this required handcrafting the URL to get wanted RSS feed. This commit makes gitweb select feed links in the HTML header and in page footer depending on current view (action). It is more elaborate, and I guess more correct, than simple patch adding $hash ('h') parameter to *all* URLs, including feed links, by Jean-Baptiste Quenot Subject: [PATCH] gitweb: Add hash parameter in feed URL when a hash is specified in the current request Message-ID: <ae63f8b50803211138y6355fd11pa64cda50a1f53011@mail.gmail.com> If $hash ('h') or $hash_base ('hb') parameter is a branch name (i.e. it starts with 'refs/heads/'; all generated URLs use this form to discriminate between tags and heads), it is used in feed URLs; if $file_name ('f') is defined, it is used in feed URLs. Feed title is set according to the kind of web feed: it is either 'log' for generic feed, 'log of <branch>', 'history of <filename>' for generic history (using implicit or explicit HEAD, i.e. current branch) or 'history of <filename> on <branch>'. There are special cases: 'heads' and 'forks' views should use OPML providing list of available feeds; 'tags' probably also should use OPML; there is no web feed equivalent to 'search' view. Currently all those cases fallback to (show) default feed. Such feed link uses "generic" class, and is shown in slightly lighter color for distinction. Currently feed can have but one starting point, and does not support negative (exclude) commit arguments. Therefore for now for *diff views it is chosen that feed follow the "to" part: to-name, to-commit for 'blobdiff', 'treediff' and 'commitdiff' views. Generating parameters for href() for feed link was separated (refactored) into get_feed_info() subroutine. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
17 years ago
sub href (%) {
my %params = @_;
# default is to use -absolute url() i.e. $my_uri
my $href = $params{-full} ? $my_url : $my_uri;
$params{'project'} = $project unless exists $params{'project'};
if ($params{-replay}) {
while (my ($name, $symbol) = each %cgi_param_mapping) {
if (!exists $params{$name}) {
$params{$name} = $input_params{$name};
}
}
}
my $use_pathinfo = gitweb_check_feature('pathinfo');
if ($use_pathinfo) {
# try to put as many parameters as possible in PATH_INFO:
# - project name
# - action
# - hash_parent or hash_parent_base:/file_parent
# - hash or hash_base:/filename
# - the snapshot_format as an appropriate suffix
# When the script is the root DirectoryIndex for the domain,
# $href here would be something like http://gitweb.example.com/
# Thus, we strip any trailing / from $href, to spare us double
# slashes in the final URL
$href =~ s,/$,,;
# Then add the project name, if present
$href .= "/".esc_url($params{'project'}) if defined $params{'project'};
delete $params{'project'};
# since we destructively absorb parameters, we keep this
# boolean that remembers if we're handling a snapshot
my $is_snapshot = $params{'action'} eq 'snapshot';
# Summary just uses the project path URL, any other action is
# added to the URL
if (defined $params{'action'}) {
$href .= "/".esc_url($params{'action'}) unless $params{'action'} eq 'summary';
delete $params{'action'};
}
# Next, we put hash_parent_base:/file_parent..hash_base:/file_name,
# stripping nonexistent or useless pieces
$href .= "/" if ($params{'hash_base'} || $params{'hash_parent_base'}
|| $params{'hash_parent'} || $params{'hash'});
if (defined $params{'hash_base'}) {
if (defined $params{'hash_parent_base'}) {
$href .= esc_url($params{'hash_parent_base'});
# skip the file_parent if it's the same as the file_name
delete $params{'file_parent'} if $params{'file_parent'} eq $params{'file_name'};
if (defined $params{'file_parent'} && $params{'file_parent'} !~ /\.\./) {
$href .= ":/".esc_url($params{'file_parent'});
delete $params{'file_parent'};
}
$href .= "..";
delete $params{'hash_parent'};
delete $params{'hash_parent_base'};
} elsif (defined $params{'hash_parent'}) {
$href .= esc_url($params{'hash_parent'}). "..";
delete $params{'hash_parent'};
}
$href .= esc_url($params{'hash_base'});
if (defined $params{'file_name'} && $params{'file_name'} !~ /\.\./) {
$href .= ":/".esc_url($params{'file_name'});
delete $params{'file_name'};
}
delete $params{'hash'};
delete $params{'hash_base'};
} elsif (defined $params{'hash'}) {
$href .= esc_url($params{'hash'});
delete $params{'hash'};
}
# If the action was a snapshot, we can absorb the
# snapshot_format parameter too
if ($is_snapshot) {
my $fmt = $params{'snapshot_format'};
# snapshot_format should always be defined when href()
# is called, but just in case some code forgets, we
# fall back to the default
$fmt ||= $snapshot_fmts[0];
$href .= $known_snapshot_formats{$fmt}{'suffix'};
delete $params{'snapshot_format'};
}
}
# now encode the parameters explicitly
my @result = ();
for (my $i = 0; $i < @cgi_param_mapping; $i += 2) {
my ($name, $symbol) = ($cgi_param_mapping[$i], $cgi_param_mapping[$i+1]);
if (defined $params{$name}) {
if (ref($params{$name}) eq "ARRAY") {
foreach my $par (@{$params{$name}}) {
push @result, $symbol . "=" . esc_param($par);
}
} else {
push @result, $symbol . "=" . esc_param($params{$name});
}
}
}
$href .= "?" . join(';', @result) if scalar @result;
return $href;
}
## ======================================================================
## validation, quoting/unquoting and escaping
sub validate_action {
my $input = shift || return undef;
return undef unless exists $actions{$input};
return $input;
}
sub validate_project {
my $input = shift || return undef;
if (!validate_pathname($input) ||
!(-d "$projectroot/$input") ||
!check_export_ok("$projectroot/$input") ||
($strict_export && !project_in_list($input))) {
return undef;
} else {
return $input;
}
}
sub validate_pathname {
my $input = shift || return undef;
# no '.' or '..' as elements of path, i.e. no '.' nor '..'
# at the beginning, at the end, and between slashes.
# also this catches doubled slashes
if ($input =~ m!(^|/)(|\.|\.\.)(/|$)!) {
return undef;
}
# no null characters
if ($input =~ m!\0!) {
return undef;
}
return $input;
}
sub validate_refname {
my $input = shift || return undef;
# textual hashes are O.K.
if ($input =~ m/^[0-9a-fA-F]{40}$/) {
return $input;
}
# it must be correct pathname
$input = validate_pathname($input)
or return undef;
# restrictions on ref name according to git-check-ref-format
if ($input =~ m!(/\.|\.\.|[\000-\040\177 ~^:?*\[]|/$)!) {
return undef;
}
return $input;
}
# decode sequences of octets in utf8 into Perl's internal form,
# which is utf-8 with utf8 flag set if needed. gitweb writes out
# in utf-8 thanks to "binmode STDOUT, ':utf8'" at beginning
sub to_utf8 {
my $str = shift;
if (utf8::valid($str)) {
utf8::decode($str);
return $str;
} else {
return decode($fallback_encoding, $str, Encode::FB_DEFAULT);
}
}
# quote unsafe chars, but keep the slash, even when it's not
# correct, but quoted slashes look too horrible in bookmarks
sub esc_param {
my $str = shift;
$str =~ s/([^A-Za-z0-9\-_.~()\/:@])/sprintf("%%%02X", ord($1))/eg;
$str =~ s/\+/%2B/g;
$str =~ s/ /\+/g;
return $str;
}
# quote unsafe chars in whole URL, so some charactrs cannot be quoted
sub esc_url {
my $str = shift;
$str =~ s/([^A-Za-z0-9\-_.~();\/;?:@&=])/sprintf("%%%02X", ord($1))/eg;
$str =~ s/\+/%2B/g;
$str =~ s/ /\+/g;
return $str;
}
# replace invalid utf8 character with SUBSTITUTION sequence
sub esc_html ($;%) {
my $str = shift;
my %opts = @_;
$str = to_utf8($str);
$str = $cgi->escapeHTML($str);
if ($opts{'-nbsp'}) {
$str =~ s/ /&nbsp;/g;
}
$str =~ s|([[:cntrl:]])|(($1 ne "\t") ? quot_cec($1) : $1)|eg;
return $str;
}
# quote control characters and escape filename to HTML
sub esc_path {
my $str = shift;
my %opts = @_;
$str = to_utf8($str);
$str = $cgi->escapeHTML($str);
if ($opts{'-nbsp'}) {
$str =~ s/ /&nbsp;/g;
}
$str =~ s|([[:cntrl:]])|quot_cec($1)|eg;
return $str;
}
# Make control characters "printable", using character escape codes (CEC)
sub quot_cec {
my $cntrl = shift;
my %opts = @_;
my %es = ( # character escape codes, aka escape sequences
"\t" => '\t', # tab (HT)
"\n" => '\n', # line feed (LF)
"\r" => '\r', # carrige return (CR)
"\f" => '\f', # form feed (FF)
"\b" => '\b', # backspace (BS)
"\a" => '\a', # alarm (bell) (BEL)
"\e" => '\e', # escape (ESC)
"\013" => '\v', # vertical tab (VT)
"\000" => '\0', # nul character (NUL)
);
my $chr = ( (exists $es{$cntrl})
? $es{$cntrl}
: sprintf('\%2x', ord($cntrl)) );
if ($opts{-nohtml}) {
return $chr;
} else {
return "<span class=\"cntrl\">$chr</span>";
}
}
# Alternatively use unicode control pictures codepoints,
# Unicode "printable representation" (PR)
sub quot_upr {
my $cntrl = shift;
my %opts = @_;
my $chr = sprintf('&#%04d;', 0x2400+ord($cntrl));
if ($opts{-nohtml}) {
return $chr;
} else {
return "<span class=\"cntrl\">$chr</span>";
}
}
# git may return quoted and escaped filenames
sub unquote {
my $str = shift;
sub unq {
my $seq = shift;
my %es = ( # character escape codes, aka escape sequences
't' => "\t", # tab (HT, TAB)
'n' => "\n", # newline (NL)
'r' => "\r", # return (CR)
'f' => "\f", # form feed (FF)
'b' => "\b", # backspace (BS)
'a' => "\a", # alarm (bell) (BEL)
'e' => "\e", # escape (ESC)
'v' => "\013", # vertical tab (VT)
);
if ($seq =~ m/^[0-7]{1,3}$/) {
# octal char sequence
return chr(oct($seq));
} elsif (exists $es{$seq}) {
# C escape sequence, aka character escape code
return $es{$seq};
}
# quoted ordinary character
return $seq;
}
if ($str =~ m/^"(.*)"$/) {
# needs unquoting
$str = $1;
$str =~ s/\\([^0-7]|[0-7]{1,3})/unq($1)/eg;
}
return $str;
}
# escape tabs (convert tabs to spaces)
sub untabify {
my $line = shift;
while ((my $pos = index($line, "\t")) != -1) {
if (my $count = (8 - ($pos % 8))) {
my $spaces = ' ' x $count;
$line =~ s/\t/$spaces/;
}
}
return $line;
}
sub project_in_list {
my $project = shift;
my @list = git_get_projects_list();
return @list && scalar(grep { $_->{'path'} eq $project } @list);
}
## ----------------------------------------------------------------------
## HTML aware string manipulation
gitweb: Better cutting matched string and its context Improve look of commit search output ('search' view) by better cutting of matched string and its context in match info, as suggested by Junio. For example, if you are looking for "very long search string" in the following line: Could somebody test this with very long search string, and see how you would now see: ...this with <<very long ... string>>, and see... instead of: Could som... <<very long search...>>, and see... (where <<something>> denotes emphasized / colored fragment; matched fragment to be more exact). For this feature, support for fourth [optional] parameter to chop_str subroutine was added. This fourth parameter is used to denote where to cut string to make it shorter. chop_str can now cut at the beginning (from the _left_ side of the string), in the middle (_center_ of the string), or at the end (from the _right_ side of the string); cutting from right is the default: chop_str(somestring, len, slop, 'left') -> ' ...string' chop_str(somestring, len, slop, 'center') -> 'som ... ing' chop_str(somestring, len, slop, 'right') -> 'somestr... ' If you want to use default slop (default additional length), use undef as value for third parameter to chop_str. While at it, return from chop_str early if given string is so short that chop_str couldn't shorten it. Simplify also regexp used by chop_str. Make ellipsis (dots) stick to shortened fragment for cutting at ends, to better see which part got shortened. Simplify passing all arguments to chop_str in chop_and_escape_str subroutine. This was needed to pass additional options to chop_str. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
17 years ago
# Try to chop given string on a word boundary between position
# $len and $len+$add_len. If there is no word boundary there,
# chop at $len+$add_len. Do not chop if chopped part plus ellipsis
# (marking chopped part) would be longer than given string.
sub chop_str {
my $str = shift;
my $len = shift;
my $add_len = shift || 10;
gitweb: Better cutting matched string and its context Improve look of commit search output ('search' view) by better cutting of matched string and its context in match info, as suggested by Junio. For example, if you are looking for "very long search string" in the following line: Could somebody test this with very long search string, and see how you would now see: ...this with <<very long ... string>>, and see... instead of: Could som... <<very long search...>>, and see... (where <<something>> denotes emphasized / colored fragment; matched fragment to be more exact). For this feature, support for fourth [optional] parameter to chop_str subroutine was added. This fourth parameter is used to denote where to cut string to make it shorter. chop_str can now cut at the beginning (from the _left_ side of the string), in the middle (_center_ of the string), or at the end (from the _right_ side of the string); cutting from right is the default: chop_str(somestring, len, slop, 'left') -> ' ...string' chop_str(somestring, len, slop, 'center') -> 'som ... ing' chop_str(somestring, len, slop, 'right') -> 'somestr... ' If you want to use default slop (default additional length), use undef as value for third parameter to chop_str. While at it, return from chop_str early if given string is so short that chop_str couldn't shorten it. Simplify also regexp used by chop_str. Make ellipsis (dots) stick to shortened fragment for cutting at ends, to better see which part got shortened. Simplify passing all arguments to chop_str in chop_and_escape_str subroutine. This was needed to pass additional options to chop_str. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
17 years ago
my $where = shift || 'right'; # 'left' | 'center' | 'right'
# Make sure perl knows it is utf8 encoded so we don't
# cut in the middle of a utf8 multibyte char.
$str = to_utf8($str);
# allow only $len chars, but don't cut a word if it would fit in $add_len
# if it doesn't fit, cut it if it's still longer than the dots we would add
gitweb: Better cutting matched string and its context Improve look of commit search output ('search' view) by better cutting of matched string and its context in match info, as suggested by Junio. For example, if you are looking for "very long search string" in the following line: Could somebody test this with very long search string, and see how you would now see: ...this with <<very long ... string>>, and see... instead of: Could som... <<very long search...>>, and see... (where <<something>> denotes emphasized / colored fragment; matched fragment to be more exact). For this feature, support for fourth [optional] parameter to chop_str subroutine was added. This fourth parameter is used to denote where to cut string to make it shorter. chop_str can now cut at the beginning (from the _left_ side of the string), in the middle (_center_ of the string), or at the end (from the _right_ side of the string); cutting from right is the default: chop_str(somestring, len, slop, 'left') -> ' ...string' chop_str(somestring, len, slop, 'center') -> 'som ... ing' chop_str(somestring, len, slop, 'right') -> 'somestr... ' If you want to use default slop (default additional length), use undef as value for third parameter to chop_str. While at it, return from chop_str early if given string is so short that chop_str couldn't shorten it. Simplify also regexp used by chop_str. Make ellipsis (dots) stick to shortened fragment for cutting at ends, to better see which part got shortened. Simplify passing all arguments to chop_str in chop_and_escape_str subroutine. This was needed to pass additional options to chop_str. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
17 years ago
# remove chopped character entities entirely
# when chopping in the middle, distribute $len into left and right part
# return early if chopping wouldn't make string shorter
if ($where eq 'center') {
return $str if ($len + 5 >= length($str)); # filler is length 5
$len = int($len/2);
} else {
return $str if ($len + 4 >= length($str)); # filler is length 4
}
# regexps: ending and beginning with word part up to $add_len
my $endre = qr/.{$len}\w{0,$add_len}/;
my $begre = qr/\w{0,$add_len}.{$len}/;
if ($where eq 'left') {
$str =~ m/^(.*?)($begre)$/;
my ($lead, $body) = ($1, $2);
if (length($lead) > 4) {
$body =~ s/^[^;]*;// if ($lead =~ m/&[^;]*$/);
$lead = " ...";
}
return "$lead$body";
} elsif ($where eq 'center') {
$str =~ m/^($endre)(.*)$/;
my ($left, $str) = ($1, $2);
$str =~ m/^(.*?)($begre)$/;
my ($mid, $right) = ($1, $2);
if (length($mid) > 5) {
$left =~ s/&[^;]*$//;
$right =~ s/^[^;]*;// if ($mid =~ m/&[^;]*$/);
$mid = " ... ";
}
return "$left$mid$right";
} else {
$str =~ m/^($endre)(.*)$/;
my $body = $1;
my $tail = $2;
if (length($tail) > 4) {
$body =~ s/&[^;]*$//;
$tail = "... ";
}
return "$body$tail";
}
}
# takes the same arguments as chop_str, but also wraps a <span> around the
# result with a title attribute if it does get chopped. Additionally, the
# string is HTML-escaped.
sub chop_and_escape_str {
gitweb: Better cutting matched string and its context Improve look of commit search output ('search' view) by better cutting of matched string and its context in match info, as suggested by Junio. For example, if you are looking for "very long search string" in the following line: Could somebody test this with very long search string, and see how you would now see: ...this with <<very long ... string>>, and see... instead of: Could som... <<very long search...>>, and see... (where <<something>> denotes emphasized / colored fragment; matched fragment to be more exact). For this feature, support for fourth [optional] parameter to chop_str subroutine was added. This fourth parameter is used to denote where to cut string to make it shorter. chop_str can now cut at the beginning (from the _left_ side of the string), in the middle (_center_ of the string), or at the end (from the _right_ side of the string); cutting from right is the default: chop_str(somestring, len, slop, 'left') -> ' ...string' chop_str(somestring, len, slop, 'center') -> 'som ... ing' chop_str(somestring, len, slop, 'right') -> 'somestr... ' If you want to use default slop (default additional length), use undef as value for third parameter to chop_str. While at it, return from chop_str early if given string is so short that chop_str couldn't shorten it. Simplify also regexp used by chop_str. Make ellipsis (dots) stick to shortened fragment for cutting at ends, to better see which part got shortened. Simplify passing all arguments to chop_str in chop_and_escape_str subroutine. This was needed to pass additional options to chop_str. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
17 years ago
my ($str) = @_;
gitweb: Better cutting matched string and its context Improve look of commit search output ('search' view) by better cutting of matched string and its context in match info, as suggested by Junio. For example, if you are looking for "very long search string" in the following line: Could somebody test this with very long search string, and see how you would now see: ...this with <<very long ... string>>, and see... instead of: Could som... <<very long search...>>, and see... (where <<something>> denotes emphasized / colored fragment; matched fragment to be more exact). For this feature, support for fourth [optional] parameter to chop_str subroutine was added. This fourth parameter is used to denote where to cut string to make it shorter. chop_str can now cut at the beginning (from the _left_ side of the string), in the middle (_center_ of the string), or at the end (from the _right_ side of the string); cutting from right is the default: chop_str(somestring, len, slop, 'left') -> ' ...string' chop_str(somestring, len, slop, 'center') -> 'som ... ing' chop_str(somestring, len, slop, 'right') -> 'somestr... ' If you want to use default slop (default additional length), use undef as value for third parameter to chop_str. While at it, return from chop_str early if given string is so short that chop_str couldn't shorten it. Simplify also regexp used by chop_str. Make ellipsis (dots) stick to shortened fragment for cutting at ends, to better see which part got shortened. Simplify passing all arguments to chop_str in chop_and_escape_str subroutine. This was needed to pass additional options to chop_str. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
17 years ago
my $chopped = chop_str(@_);
if ($chopped eq $str) {
return esc_html($chopped);
} else {
$str =~ s/([[:cntrl:]])/?/g;
return $cgi->span({-title=>$str}, esc_html($chopped));
}
}
## ----------------------------------------------------------------------
## functions returning short strings
# CSS class for given age value (in seconds)
sub age_class {
my $age = shift;
if (!defined $age) {
return "noage";
} elsif ($age < 60*60*2) {
return "age0";
} elsif ($age < 60*60*24*2) {
return "age1";
} else {
return "age2";
}
}
# convert age in seconds to "nn units ago" string
sub age_string {
my $age = shift;
my $age_str;
20 years ago
if ($age > 60*60*24*365*2) {
$age_str = (int $age/60/60/24/365);
$age_str .= " years ago";
} elsif ($age > 60*60*24*(365/12)*2) {
$age_str = int $age/60/60/24/(365/12);
$age_str .= " months ago";
} elsif ($age > 60*60*24*7*2) {
$age_str = int $age/60/60/24/7;
$age_str .= " weeks ago";
} elsif ($age > 60*60*24*2) {
$age_str = int $age/60/60/24;
$age_str .= " days ago";
} elsif ($age > 60*60*2) {
$age_str = int $age/60/60;
$age_str .= " hours ago";
} elsif ($age > 60*2) {
$age_str = int $age/60;
$age_str .= " min ago";
} elsif ($age > 2) {
$age_str = int $age;
$age_str .= " sec ago";
} else {
$age_str .= " right now";
20 years ago
}
return $age_str;
}
use constant {
S_IFINVALID => 0030000,
S_IFGITLINK => 0160000,
};
# submodule/subproject, a commit object reference
sub S_ISGITLINK($) {
my $mode = shift;
return (($mode & S_IFMT) == S_IFGITLINK)
}
# convert file mode in octal to symbolic file mode string
sub mode_str {
my $mode = oct shift;
if (S_ISGITLINK($mode)) {
return 'm---------';
} elsif (S_ISDIR($mode & S_IFMT)) {
return 'drwxr-xr-x';
} elsif (S_ISLNK($mode)) {
return 'lrwxrwxrwx';
} elsif (S_ISREG($mode)) {
# git cares only about the executable bit
if ($mode & S_IXUSR) {
return '-rwxr-xr-x';
} else {
return '-rw-r--r--';
};
20 years ago
} else {
return '----------';
20 years ago
}
}
# convert file mode in octal to file type string
sub file_type {
gitweb: Use git-diff-tree or git-diff patch output for blobdiff This is second part of removing gitweb dependency on external diff (used in git_diff_print). Get rid of git_diff_print invocation in git_blobdiff, and use either git-diff-tree (when both hash_base and hash_parent_base are provided) patch format or git-diff patch format (when only hash and hash_parent are provided) for output. Supported URI schemes, and output formats: * New URI scheme: both hash_base and hash_parent_base (trees-ish containing blobs versions we want to compare) are provided. Also either filename is provided, or hash (of blob) is provided (we try to find filename then). For this scheme we have copying and renames detection, mode changes, file types etc., and information extended diff header is correct. * Old URI scheme: hash_parent_base is not provided, we use hash and hash_parent to directly compare blobs using git-diff. If no filename is given, blobs hashes are used in place of filenames. This scheme has always "blob" as file type, it cannot detect mode changes, and we rely on CGI parameters to provide name of the file. Added git_to_hash subroutine, which transforms symbolic name or list of symbolic name to hash or list of hashes using git-rev-parse. To have "blob" instead of "unknown" (or "file" regardless of the type) in "gitweb diff header" for legacy scheme, file_type function now returns its argument if it is not octal string. Added support for fake "2" status code in git_patchset_body. Such code is generated by git_blobdiff in legacy scheme case. ATTENTION: The order of arguments (operands) to git-diff is reversed (sic!) to have correct diff in the legacy (no hash_parent_base) case. $hash_parent, $hash ordering is commented out, as it gives reversed patch (at least for git version 1.4.1.1) as compared to output in new scheme and output of older gitweb version. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
my $mode = shift;
if ($mode !~ m/^[0-7]+$/) {
return $mode;
} else {
$mode = oct $mode;
}
20 years ago
if (S_ISGITLINK($mode)) {
return "submodule";
} elsif (S_ISDIR($mode & S_IFMT)) {
return "directory";
} elsif (S_ISLNK($mode)) {
return "symlink";
} elsif (S_ISREG($mode)) {
return "file";
} else {
return "unknown";
}
20 years ago
}
# convert file mode in octal to file type description string
sub file_type_long {
my $mode = shift;
if ($mode !~ m/^[0-7]+$/) {
return $mode;
} else {
$mode = oct $mode;
}
if (S_ISGITLINK($mode)) {
return "submodule";
} elsif (S_ISDIR($mode & S_IFMT)) {
return "directory";
} elsif (S_ISLNK($mode)) {
return "symlink";
} elsif (S_ISREG($mode)) {
if ($mode & S_IXUSR) {
return "executable";
} else {
return "file";
};
} else {
return "unknown";
}
}
## ----------------------------------------------------------------------
## functions returning short HTML fragments, or transforming HTML fragments
## which don't belong to other sections
# format line of commit message.
sub format_log_line_html {
my $line = shift;
$line = esc_html($line, -nbsp=>1);
if ($line =~ m/([0-9a-fA-F]{8,40})/) {
my $hash_text = $1;
my $link =
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"object", hash=>$hash_text),
-class => "text"}, $hash_text);
$line =~ s/$hash_text/$link/;
}
return $line;
}
# format marker of refs pointing to given object
# the destination action is chosen based on object type and current context:
# - for annotated tags, we choose the tag view unless it's the current view
# already, in which case we go to shortlog view
# - for other refs, we keep the current view if we're in history, shortlog or
# log view, and select shortlog otherwise
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
sub format_ref_marker {
my ($refs, $id) = @_;
my $markers = '';
if (defined $refs->{$id}) {
foreach my $ref (@{$refs->{$id}}) {
# this code exploits the fact that non-lightweight tags are the
# only indirect objects, and that they are the only objects for which
# we want to use tag instead of shortlog as action
my ($type, $name) = qw();
my $indirect = ($ref =~ s/\^\{\}$//);
# e.g. tags/v2.6.11 or heads/next
if ($ref =~ m!^(.*?)s?/(.*)$!) {
$type = $1;
$name = $2;
} else {
$type = "ref";
$name = $ref;
}
my $class = $type;
$class .= " indirect" if $indirect;
my $dest_action = "shortlog";
if ($indirect) {
$dest_action = "tag" unless $action eq "tag";
} elsif ($action =~ /^(history|(short)?log)$/) {
$dest_action = $action;
}
my $dest = "";
$dest .= "refs/" unless $ref =~ m!^refs/!;
$dest .= $ref;
my $link = $cgi->a({
-href => href(
action=>$dest_action,
hash=>$dest
)}, $name);
$markers .= " <span class=\"$class\" title=\"$ref\">" .
$link . "</span>";
}
}
if ($markers) {
return ' <span class="refs">'. $markers . '</span>';
} else {
return "";
}
}
# format, perhaps shortened and with markers, title line
sub format_subject_html {
my ($long, $short, $href, $extra) = @_;
$extra = '' unless defined($extra);
if (length($short) < length($long)) {
return $cgi->a({-href => $href, -class => "list subject",
-title => to_utf8($long)},
esc_html($short) . $extra);
} else {
return $cgi->a({-href => $href, -class => "list subject"},
esc_html($long) . $extra);
}
}
# format git diff header line, i.e. "diff --(git|combined|cc) ..."
sub format_git_diff_header_line {
my $line = shift;
my $diffinfo = shift;
my ($from, $to) = @_;
if ($diffinfo->{'nparents'}) {
# combined diff
$line =~ s!^(diff (.*?) )"?.*$!$1!;
if ($to->{'href'}) {
$line .= $cgi->a({-href => $to->{'href'}, -class => "path"},
esc_path($to->{'file'}));
} else { # file was deleted (no href)
$line .= esc_path($to->{'file'});
}
} else {
# "ordinary" diff
$line =~ s!^(diff (.*?) )"?a/.*$!$1!;
if ($from->{'href'}) {
$line .= $cgi->a({-href => $from->{'href'}, -class => "path"},
'a/' . esc_path($from->{'file'}));
} else { # file was added (no href)
$line .= 'a/' . esc_path($from->{'file'});
}
$line .= ' ';
if ($to->{'href'}) {
$line .= $cgi->a({-href => $to->{'href'}, -class => "path"},
'b/' . esc_path($to->{'file'}));
} else { # file was deleted
$line .= 'b/' . esc_path($to->{'file'});
}
}
return "<div class=\"diff header\">$line</div>\n";
}
# format extended diff header line, before patch itself
sub format_extended_diff_header_line {
my $line = shift;
my $diffinfo = shift;
my ($from, $to) = @_;
# match <path>
if ($line =~ s!^((copy|rename) from ).*$!$1! && $from->{'href'}) {
$line .= $cgi->a({-href=>$from->{'href'}, -class=>"path"},
esc_path($from->{'file'}));
}
if ($line =~ s!^((copy|rename) to ).*$!$1! && $to->{'href'}) {
$line .= $cgi->a({-href=>$to->{'href'}, -class=>"path"},
esc_path($to->{'file'}));
}
# match single <mode>
if ($line =~ m/\s(\d{6})$/) {
$line .= '<span class="info"> (' .
file_type_long($1) .
')</span>';
}
# match <hash>
if ($line =~ m/^index [0-9a-fA-F]{40},[0-9a-fA-F]{40}/) {
# can match only for combined diff
$line = 'index ';
for (my $i = 0; $i < $diffinfo->{'nparents'}; $i++) {
if ($from->{'href'}[$i]) {
$line .= $cgi->a({-href=>$from->{'href'}[$i],
-class=>"hash"},
substr($diffinfo->{'from_id'}[$i],0,7));
} else {
$line .= '0' x 7;
}
# separator
$line .= ',' if ($i < $diffinfo->{'nparents'} - 1);
}
$line .= '..';
if ($to->{'href'}) {
$line .= $cgi->a({-href=>$to->{'href'}, -class=>"hash"},
substr($diffinfo->{'to_id'},0,7));
} else {
$line .= '0' x 7;
}
} elsif ($line =~ m/^index [0-9a-fA-F]{40}..[0-9a-fA-F]{40}/) {
# can match only for ordinary diff
my ($from_link, $to_link);
if ($from->{'href'}) {
$from_link = $cgi->a({-href=>$from->{'href'}, -class=>"hash"},
substr($diffinfo->{'from_id'},0,7));
} else {
$from_link = '0' x 7;
}
if ($to->{'href'}) {
$to_link = $cgi->a({-href=>$to->{'href'}, -class=>"hash"},
substr($diffinfo->{'to_id'},0,7));
} else {
$to_link = '0' x 7;
}
my ($from_id, $to_id) = ($diffinfo->{'from_id'}, $diffinfo->{'to_id'});
$line =~ s!$from_id\.\.$to_id!$from_link..$to_link!;
}
return $line . "<br/>\n";
}
# format from-file/to-file diff header
sub format_diff_from_to_header {
my ($from_line, $to_line, $diffinfo, $from, $to, @parents) = @_;
my $line;
my $result = '';
$line = $from_line;
#assert($line =~ m/^---/) if DEBUG;
# no extra formatting for "^--- /dev/null"
if (! $diffinfo->{'nparents'}) {
# ordinary (single parent) diff
if ($line =~ m!^--- "?a/!) {
if ($from->{'href'}) {
$line = '--- a/' .
$cgi->a({-href=>$from->{'href'}, -class=>"path"},
esc_path($from->{'file'}));
} else {
$line = '--- a/' .
esc_path($from->{'file'});
}
}
$result .= qq!<div class="diff from_file">$line</div>\n!;
} else {
# combined diff (merge commit)
for (my $i = 0; $i < $diffinfo->{'nparents'}; $i++) {
if ($from->{'href'}[$i]) {
$line = '--- ' .
$cgi->a({-href=>href(action=>"blobdiff",
hash_parent=>$diffinfo->{'from_id'}[$i],
hash_parent_base=>$parents[$i],
file_parent=>$from->{'file'}[$i],
hash=>$diffinfo->{'to_id'},
hash_base=>$hash,
file_name=>$to->{'file'}),
-class=>"path",
-title=>"diff" . ($i+1)},
$i+1) .
'/' .
$cgi->a({-href=>$from->{'href'}[$i], -class=>"path"},
esc_path($from->{'file'}[$i]));
} else {
$line = '--- /dev/null';
}
$result .= qq!<div class="diff from_file">$line</div>\n!;
}
}
$line = $to_line;
#assert($line =~ m/^\+\+\+/) if DEBUG;
# no extra formatting for "^+++ /dev/null"
if ($line =~ m!^\+\+\+ "?b/!) {
if ($to->{'href'}) {
$line = '+++ b/' .
$cgi->a({-href=>$to->{'href'}, -class=>"path"},
esc_path($to->{'file'}));
} else {
$line = '+++ b/' .
esc_path($to->{'file'});
}
}
$result .= qq!<div class="diff to_file">$line</div>\n!;
return $result;
}
# create note for patch simplified by combined diff
sub format_diff_cc_simplified {
my ($diffinfo, @parents) = @_;
my $result = '';
$result .= "<div class=\"diff header\">" .
"diff --cc ";
if (!is_deleted($diffinfo)) {
$result .= $cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"blob",
hash_base=>$hash,
hash=>$diffinfo->{'to_id'},
file_name=>$diffinfo->{'to_file'}),
-class => "path"},
esc_path($diffinfo->{'to_file'}));
} else {
$result .= esc_path($diffinfo->{'to_file'});
}
$result .= "</div>\n" . # class="diff header"
"<div class=\"diff nodifferences\">" .
"Simple merge" .
"</div>\n"; # class="diff nodifferences"
return $result;
}
# format patch (diff) line (not to be used for diff headers)
gitweb: Use git-diff-tree patch output for commitdiff Get rid of git_diff_print invocation in git_commitdiff and therefore external diff (/usr/bin/diff) invocation, and use only git-diff-tree to generate patch. git_commitdiff and git_commitdiff_plain are collapsed into one subroutine git_commitdiff, with format (currently 'html' which is default format corresponding to git_commitdiff, and 'plain' corresponding to git_commitdiff_plain) specified in argument. Separate patch (diff) pretty-printing into git_patchset_body. It is used in git_commitdiff. Separate patch (diff) line formatting from git_diff_print into format_diff_line function. It is used in git_patchset_body. While at it, add $hash parameter to git_difftree_body, according to rule that inner functions should use parameter passing, and not global variables. CHANGES TO OUTPUT: * "commitdiff" now products patches with renaming and copying detection (git-diff-tree is invoked with -M and -C options). Empty patches (mode changes and pure renames and copying) are not written currently. Former version broke renaming and copying, and didn't notice mode changes, like this version. * "commitdiff" output is now divided into several div elements of class "log", "patchset" and "patch". * "commitdiff_plain" now only generates X-Git-Tag: line only if there is tag pointing to the current commit. Former version which wrote first tag following current commit was broken[*1*]; besides we are interested rather in tags _preceding_ the commit, and _heads_ following the commit. X-Git-Url: now is current URL; former version tried[*2*] to output URL to HTML version of commitdiff. * "commitdiff_plain" is generated by git-diff-tree, and has therefore has git specific extensions to diff format: "git diff" header and optional extended header lines. FOOTNOTES [*1*] First it generated rev-list starting from HEAD even if hash_base parameter was set, second it wasn't corrected according to changes made in git_get_references (formerly read_info_ref) output, third even for older version of read_info_ref output it didn't work for multiple tags pointing to the current commit (rare). [*2*] It wrote URL for commitdiff without hash_parent, which produces diff to first parent and is not the same as current diff if it is diff of merge commit to non-first parent. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
sub format_diff_line {
my $line = shift;
my ($from, $to) = @_;
gitweb: Use git-diff-tree patch output for commitdiff Get rid of git_diff_print invocation in git_commitdiff and therefore external diff (/usr/bin/diff) invocation, and use only git-diff-tree to generate patch. git_commitdiff and git_commitdiff_plain are collapsed into one subroutine git_commitdiff, with format (currently 'html' which is default format corresponding to git_commitdiff, and 'plain' corresponding to git_commitdiff_plain) specified in argument. Separate patch (diff) pretty-printing into git_patchset_body. It is used in git_commitdiff. Separate patch (diff) line formatting from git_diff_print into format_diff_line function. It is used in git_patchset_body. While at it, add $hash parameter to git_difftree_body, according to rule that inner functions should use parameter passing, and not global variables. CHANGES TO OUTPUT: * "commitdiff" now products patches with renaming and copying detection (git-diff-tree is invoked with -M and -C options). Empty patches (mode changes and pure renames and copying) are not written currently. Former version broke renaming and copying, and didn't notice mode changes, like this version. * "commitdiff" output is now divided into several div elements of class "log", "patchset" and "patch". * "commitdiff_plain" now only generates X-Git-Tag: line only if there is tag pointing to the current commit. Former version which wrote first tag following current commit was broken[*1*]; besides we are interested rather in tags _preceding_ the commit, and _heads_ following the commit. X-Git-Url: now is current URL; former version tried[*2*] to output URL to HTML version of commitdiff. * "commitdiff_plain" is generated by git-diff-tree, and has therefore has git specific extensions to diff format: "git diff" header and optional extended header lines. FOOTNOTES [*1*] First it generated rev-list starting from HEAD even if hash_base parameter was set, second it wasn't corrected according to changes made in git_get_references (formerly read_info_ref) output, third even for older version of read_info_ref output it didn't work for multiple tags pointing to the current commit (rare). [*2*] It wrote URL for commitdiff without hash_parent, which produces diff to first parent and is not the same as current diff if it is diff of merge commit to non-first parent. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
my $diff_class = "";
chomp $line;
if ($from && $to && ref($from->{'href'}) eq "ARRAY") {
# combined diff
my $prefix = substr($line, 0, scalar @{$from->{'href'}});
if ($line =~ m/^\@{3}/) {
$diff_class = " chunk_header";
} elsif ($line =~ m/^\\/) {
$diff_class = " incomplete";
} elsif ($prefix =~ tr/+/+/) {
$diff_class = " add";
} elsif ($prefix =~ tr/-/-/) {
$diff_class = " rem";
}
} else {
# assume ordinary diff
my $char = substr($line, 0, 1);
if ($char eq '+') {
$diff_class = " add";
} elsif ($char eq '-') {
$diff_class = " rem";
} elsif ($char eq '@') {
$diff_class = " chunk_header";
} elsif ($char eq "\\") {
$diff_class = " incomplete";
}
gitweb: Use git-diff-tree patch output for commitdiff Get rid of git_diff_print invocation in git_commitdiff and therefore external diff (/usr/bin/diff) invocation, and use only git-diff-tree to generate patch. git_commitdiff and git_commitdiff_plain are collapsed into one subroutine git_commitdiff, with format (currently 'html' which is default format corresponding to git_commitdiff, and 'plain' corresponding to git_commitdiff_plain) specified in argument. Separate patch (diff) pretty-printing into git_patchset_body. It is used in git_commitdiff. Separate patch (diff) line formatting from git_diff_print into format_diff_line function. It is used in git_patchset_body. While at it, add $hash parameter to git_difftree_body, according to rule that inner functions should use parameter passing, and not global variables. CHANGES TO OUTPUT: * "commitdiff" now products patches with renaming and copying detection (git-diff-tree is invoked with -M and -C options). Empty patches (mode changes and pure renames and copying) are not written currently. Former version broke renaming and copying, and didn't notice mode changes, like this version. * "commitdiff" output is now divided into several div elements of class "log", "patchset" and "patch". * "commitdiff_plain" now only generates X-Git-Tag: line only if there is tag pointing to the current commit. Former version which wrote first tag following current commit was broken[*1*]; besides we are interested rather in tags _preceding_ the commit, and _heads_ following the commit. X-Git-Url: now is current URL; former version tried[*2*] to output URL to HTML version of commitdiff. * "commitdiff_plain" is generated by git-diff-tree, and has therefore has git specific extensions to diff format: "git diff" header and optional extended header lines. FOOTNOTES [*1*] First it generated rev-list starting from HEAD even if hash_base parameter was set, second it wasn't corrected according to changes made in git_get_references (formerly read_info_ref) output, third even for older version of read_info_ref output it didn't work for multiple tags pointing to the current commit (rare). [*2*] It wrote URL for commitdiff without hash_parent, which produces diff to first parent and is not the same as current diff if it is diff of merge commit to non-first parent. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
}
$line = untabify($line);
if ($from && $to && $line =~ m/^\@{2} /) {
my ($from_text, $from_start, $from_lines, $to_text, $to_start, $to_lines, $section) =
$line =~ m/^\@{2} (-(\d+)(?:,(\d+))?) (\+(\d+)(?:,(\d+))?) \@{2}(.*)$/;
$from_lines = 0 unless defined $from_lines;
$to_lines = 0 unless defined $to_lines;
if ($from->{'href'}) {
$from_text = $cgi->a({-href=>"$from->{'href'}#l$from_start",
-class=>"list"}, $from_text);
}
if ($to->{'href'}) {
$to_text = $cgi->a({-href=>"$to->{'href'}#l$to_start",
-class=>"list"}, $to_text);
}
$line = "<span class=\"chunk_info\">@@ $from_text $to_text @@</span>" .
"<span class=\"section\">" . esc_html($section, -nbsp=>1) . "</span>";
return "<div class=\"diff$diff_class\">$line</div>\n";
} elsif ($from && $to && $line =~ m/^\@{3}/) {
my ($prefix, $ranges, $section) = $line =~ m/^(\@+) (.*?) \@+(.*)$/;
my (@from_text, @from_start, @from_nlines, $to_text, $to_start, $to_nlines);
@from_text = split(' ', $ranges);
for (my $i = 0; $i < @from_text; ++$i) {
($from_start[$i], $from_nlines[$i]) =
(split(',', substr($from_text[$i], 1)), 0);
}
$to_text = pop @from_text;
$to_start = pop @from_start;
$to_nlines = pop @from_nlines;
$line = "<span class=\"chunk_info\">$prefix ";
for (my $i = 0; $i < @from_text; ++$i) {
if ($from->{'href'}[$i]) {
$line .= $cgi->a({-href=>"$from->{'href'}[$i]#l$from_start[$i]",
-class=>"list"}, $from_text[$i]);
} else {
$line .= $from_text[$i];
}
$line .= " ";
}
if ($to->{'href'}) {
$line .= $cgi->a({-href=>"$to->{'href'}#l$to_start",
-class=>"list"}, $to_text);
} else {
$line .= $to_text;
}
$line .= " $prefix</span>" .
"<span class=\"section\">" . esc_html($section, -nbsp=>1) . "</span>";
return "<div class=\"diff$diff_class\">$line</div>\n";
}
return "<div class=\"diff$diff_class\">" . esc_html($line, -nbsp=>1) . "</div>\n";
gitweb: Use git-diff-tree patch output for commitdiff Get rid of git_diff_print invocation in git_commitdiff and therefore external diff (/usr/bin/diff) invocation, and use only git-diff-tree to generate patch. git_commitdiff and git_commitdiff_plain are collapsed into one subroutine git_commitdiff, with format (currently 'html' which is default format corresponding to git_commitdiff, and 'plain' corresponding to git_commitdiff_plain) specified in argument. Separate patch (diff) pretty-printing into git_patchset_body. It is used in git_commitdiff. Separate patch (diff) line formatting from git_diff_print into format_diff_line function. It is used in git_patchset_body. While at it, add $hash parameter to git_difftree_body, according to rule that inner functions should use parameter passing, and not global variables. CHANGES TO OUTPUT: * "commitdiff" now products patches with renaming and copying detection (git-diff-tree is invoked with -M and -C options). Empty patches (mode changes and pure renames and copying) are not written currently. Former version broke renaming and copying, and didn't notice mode changes, like this version. * "commitdiff" output is now divided into several div elements of class "log", "patchset" and "patch". * "commitdiff_plain" now only generates X-Git-Tag: line only if there is tag pointing to the current commit. Former version which wrote first tag following current commit was broken[*1*]; besides we are interested rather in tags _preceding_ the commit, and _heads_ following the commit. X-Git-Url: now is current URL; former version tried[*2*] to output URL to HTML version of commitdiff. * "commitdiff_plain" is generated by git-diff-tree, and has therefore has git specific extensions to diff format: "git diff" header and optional extended header lines. FOOTNOTES [*1*] First it generated rev-list starting from HEAD even if hash_base parameter was set, second it wasn't corrected according to changes made in git_get_references (formerly read_info_ref) output, third even for older version of read_info_ref output it didn't work for multiple tags pointing to the current commit (rare). [*2*] It wrote URL for commitdiff without hash_parent, which produces diff to first parent and is not the same as current diff if it is diff of merge commit to non-first parent. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
}
gitweb: snapshot cleanups & support for offering multiple formats - Centralize knowledge about snapshot formats (mime types, extensions, commands) in %known_snapshot_formats and improve how some of that information is specified. In particular, zip files are no longer a special case. - Add support for offering multiple snapshot formats to the user so that he/she can download a snapshot in the format he/she prefers. The site-wide or project configuration now gives a list of formats to offer, and if more than one format is offered, the "_snapshot_" link becomes something like "snapshot (_tar.bz2_ _zip_)". - If only one format is offered, a tooltip on the "_snapshot_" link tells the user what it is. - Fix out-of-date "tarball" -> "archive" in comment. Alert for gitweb site administrators: This patch changes the format of $feature{'snapshot'}{'default'} in gitweb_config.perl from a list of three pieces of information about a single format to a list of one or more formats you wish to offer from the set ('tgz', 'tbz2', 'zip'). Update your gitweb_config.perl appropriately. There was taken care for old-style gitweb configuration to work as it used to, but this backward compatibility works only for the values which correspond to gitweb.snapshot values of 'gzip', 'bzip2' and 'zip', i.e. ['x-gzip', 'gz', 'gzip'] ['x-bzip2', 'bz2', 'bzip2'] ['x-zip', 'zip', ''] The preferred names for gitweb.snapshot in repository configuration have also changed from 'gzip' and 'bzip2' to 'tgz' and 'tbz2', but the old names are still recognized for compatibility. Signed-off-by: Matt McCutchen <hashproduct@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
18 years ago
# Generates undef or something like "_snapshot_" or "snapshot (_tbz2_ _zip_)",
# linked. Pass the hash of the tree/commit to snapshot.
sub format_snapshot_links {
my ($hash) = @_;
my $num_fmts = @snapshot_fmts;
if ($num_fmts > 1) {
# A parenthesized list of links bearing format names.
# e.g. "snapshot (_tar.gz_ _zip_)"
gitweb: snapshot cleanups & support for offering multiple formats - Centralize knowledge about snapshot formats (mime types, extensions, commands) in %known_snapshot_formats and improve how some of that information is specified. In particular, zip files are no longer a special case. - Add support for offering multiple snapshot formats to the user so that he/she can download a snapshot in the format he/she prefers. The site-wide or project configuration now gives a list of formats to offer, and if more than one format is offered, the "_snapshot_" link becomes something like "snapshot (_tar.bz2_ _zip_)". - If only one format is offered, a tooltip on the "_snapshot_" link tells the user what it is. - Fix out-of-date "tarball" -> "archive" in comment. Alert for gitweb site administrators: This patch changes the format of $feature{'snapshot'}{'default'} in gitweb_config.perl from a list of three pieces of information about a single format to a list of one or more formats you wish to offer from the set ('tgz', 'tbz2', 'zip'). Update your gitweb_config.perl appropriately. There was taken care for old-style gitweb configuration to work as it used to, but this backward compatibility works only for the values which correspond to gitweb.snapshot values of 'gzip', 'bzip2' and 'zip', i.e. ['x-gzip', 'gz', 'gzip'] ['x-bzip2', 'bz2', 'bzip2'] ['x-zip', 'zip', ''] The preferred names for gitweb.snapshot in repository configuration have also changed from 'gzip' and 'bzip2' to 'tgz' and 'tbz2', but the old names are still recognized for compatibility. Signed-off-by: Matt McCutchen <hashproduct@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
18 years ago
return "snapshot (" . join(' ', map
$cgi->a({
-href => href(
action=>"snapshot",
hash=>$hash,
snapshot_format=>$_
)
}, $known_snapshot_formats{$_}{'display'})
, @snapshot_fmts) . ")";
} elsif ($num_fmts == 1) {
# A single "snapshot" link whose tooltip bears the format name.
# i.e. "_snapshot_"
gitweb: snapshot cleanups & support for offering multiple formats - Centralize knowledge about snapshot formats (mime types, extensions, commands) in %known_snapshot_formats and improve how some of that information is specified. In particular, zip files are no longer a special case. - Add support for offering multiple snapshot formats to the user so that he/she can download a snapshot in the format he/she prefers. The site-wide or project configuration now gives a list of formats to offer, and if more than one format is offered, the "_snapshot_" link becomes something like "snapshot (_tar.bz2_ _zip_)". - If only one format is offered, a tooltip on the "_snapshot_" link tells the user what it is. - Fix out-of-date "tarball" -> "archive" in comment. Alert for gitweb site administrators: This patch changes the format of $feature{'snapshot'}{'default'} in gitweb_config.perl from a list of three pieces of information about a single format to a list of one or more formats you wish to offer from the set ('tgz', 'tbz2', 'zip'). Update your gitweb_config.perl appropriately. There was taken care for old-style gitweb configuration to work as it used to, but this backward compatibility works only for the values which correspond to gitweb.snapshot values of 'gzip', 'bzip2' and 'zip', i.e. ['x-gzip', 'gz', 'gzip'] ['x-bzip2', 'bz2', 'bzip2'] ['x-zip', 'zip', ''] The preferred names for gitweb.snapshot in repository configuration have also changed from 'gzip' and 'bzip2' to 'tgz' and 'tbz2', but the old names are still recognized for compatibility. Signed-off-by: Matt McCutchen <hashproduct@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
18 years ago
my ($fmt) = @snapshot_fmts;
return
$cgi->a({
gitweb: snapshot cleanups & support for offering multiple formats - Centralize knowledge about snapshot formats (mime types, extensions, commands) in %known_snapshot_formats and improve how some of that information is specified. In particular, zip files are no longer a special case. - Add support for offering multiple snapshot formats to the user so that he/she can download a snapshot in the format he/she prefers. The site-wide or project configuration now gives a list of formats to offer, and if more than one format is offered, the "_snapshot_" link becomes something like "snapshot (_tar.bz2_ _zip_)". - If only one format is offered, a tooltip on the "_snapshot_" link tells the user what it is. - Fix out-of-date "tarball" -> "archive" in comment. Alert for gitweb site administrators: This patch changes the format of $feature{'snapshot'}{'default'} in gitweb_config.perl from a list of three pieces of information about a single format to a list of one or more formats you wish to offer from the set ('tgz', 'tbz2', 'zip'). Update your gitweb_config.perl appropriately. There was taken care for old-style gitweb configuration to work as it used to, but this backward compatibility works only for the values which correspond to gitweb.snapshot values of 'gzip', 'bzip2' and 'zip', i.e. ['x-gzip', 'gz', 'gzip'] ['x-bzip2', 'bz2', 'bzip2'] ['x-zip', 'zip', ''] The preferred names for gitweb.snapshot in repository configuration have also changed from 'gzip' and 'bzip2' to 'tgz' and 'tbz2', but the old names are still recognized for compatibility. Signed-off-by: Matt McCutchen <hashproduct@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
18 years ago
-href => href(
action=>"snapshot",
hash=>$hash,
snapshot_format=>$fmt
),
-title => "in format: $known_snapshot_formats{$fmt}{'display'}"
}, "snapshot");
} else { # $num_fmts == 0
return undef;
}
}
gitweb: Use feed link according to current view Michael G. Noll said in comments to the "Switching my code repository from Subversion (SVN) to git" article (http://tinyurl.com/37v67l) in his "My digital moleskine" blog, that one of the things he is missing in gitweb from SVN::Web is an RSS feed with news/information of the current view (including RSS feed for single file or directory). This is not exactly true, as since refactoring feed generation in af6feeb (gitweb: Refactor feed generation, make output prettier, add Atom feed, 2006-11-19), gitweb can generate feeds (RSS or Atom) for history of a given branch, history limited to a given directory, or history of a given file. Nevertheless this required handcrafting the URL to get wanted RSS feed. This commit makes gitweb select feed links in the HTML header and in page footer depending on current view (action). It is more elaborate, and I guess more correct, than simple patch adding $hash ('h') parameter to *all* URLs, including feed links, by Jean-Baptiste Quenot Subject: [PATCH] gitweb: Add hash parameter in feed URL when a hash is specified in the current request Message-ID: <ae63f8b50803211138y6355fd11pa64cda50a1f53011@mail.gmail.com> If $hash ('h') or $hash_base ('hb') parameter is a branch name (i.e. it starts with 'refs/heads/'; all generated URLs use this form to discriminate between tags and heads), it is used in feed URLs; if $file_name ('f') is defined, it is used in feed URLs. Feed title is set according to the kind of web feed: it is either 'log' for generic feed, 'log of <branch>', 'history of <filename>' for generic history (using implicit or explicit HEAD, i.e. current branch) or 'history of <filename> on <branch>'. There are special cases: 'heads' and 'forks' views should use OPML providing list of available feeds; 'tags' probably also should use OPML; there is no web feed equivalent to 'search' view. Currently all those cases fallback to (show) default feed. Such feed link uses "generic" class, and is shown in slightly lighter color for distinction. Currently feed can have but one starting point, and does not support negative (exclude) commit arguments. Therefore for now for *diff views it is chosen that feed follow the "to" part: to-name, to-commit for 'blobdiff', 'treediff' and 'commitdiff' views. Generating parameters for href() for feed link was separated (refactored) into get_feed_info() subroutine. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
17 years ago
## ......................................................................
## functions returning values to be passed, perhaps after some
## transformation, to other functions; e.g. returning arguments to href()
# returns hash to be passed to href to generate gitweb URL
# in -title key it returns description of link
sub get_feed_info {
my $format = shift || 'Atom';
my %res = (action => lc($format));
# feed links are possible only for project views
return unless (defined $project);
# some views should link to OPML, or to generic project feed,
# or don't have specific feed yet (so they should use generic)
return if ($action =~ /^(?:tags|heads|forks|tag|search)$/x);
my $branch;
# branches refs uses 'refs/heads/' prefix (fullname) to differentiate
# from tag links; this also makes possible to detect branch links
if ((defined $hash_base && $hash_base =~ m!^refs/heads/(.*)$!) ||
(defined $hash && $hash =~ m!^refs/heads/(.*)$!)) {
$branch = $1;
}
# find log type for feed description (title)
my $type = 'log';
if (defined $file_name) {
$type = "history of $file_name";
$type .= "/" if ($action eq 'tree');
$type .= " on '$branch'" if (defined $branch);
} else {
$type = "log of $branch" if (defined $branch);
}
$res{-title} = $type;
$res{'hash'} = (defined $branch ? "refs/heads/$branch" : undef);
$res{'file_name'} = $file_name;
return %res;
}
## ----------------------------------------------------------------------
## git utility subroutines, invoking git commands
20 years ago
# returns path to the core git executable and the --git-dir parameter as list
sub git_cmd {
return $GIT, '--git-dir='.$git_dir;
}
# quote the given arguments for passing them to the shell
# quote_command("command", "arg 1", "arg with ' and ! characters")
# => "'command' 'arg 1' 'arg with '\'' and '\!' characters'"
# Try to avoid using this function wherever possible.
sub quote_command {
return join(' ',
map( { my $a = $_; $a =~ s/(['!])/'\\$1'/g; "'$a'" } @_ ));
}
# get HEAD ref of given project as hash
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
sub git_get_head_hash {
my $project = shift;
my $o_git_dir = $git_dir;
my $retval = undef;
$git_dir = "$projectroot/$project";
if (open my $fd, "-|", git_cmd(), "rev-parse", "--verify", "HEAD") {
my $head = <$fd>;
close $fd;
if (defined $head && $head =~ /^([0-9a-fA-F]{40})$/) {
$retval = $1;
}
}
if (defined $o_git_dir) {
$git_dir = $o_git_dir;
}
return $retval;
}
# get type of given object
sub git_get_type {
my $hash = shift;
open my $fd, "-|", git_cmd(), "cat-file", '-t', $hash or return;
my $type = <$fd>;
close $fd or return;
chomp $type;
return $type;
}
gitweb: Read repo config using 'git config -z -l' Change git_get_project_config to run git-config only once per repository, without changing its signature (its calling convention). This means for example that it returns 'true' or 'false' when called with second argument '--bool', and not true or false value. Instead of calling 'git config [<type>] --get gitweb.<key>' once for each config variable, call 'git config -z -l' only once, parsing and saving its output to %config variable. This makes possible to add new per repository configuration without paying cost of forking once per variable checked. We can now allow repository description and repository URLs to be stored in config file without badly affecting gitweb performance. For now only configuration variables for 'gitweb' section are stored. Multiple values for single configuration variable are stored as anonymous array reference; configuration variable with no value is stored as undef. Converting configuration variable values to boolean or integer value are done in Perl. Results differ from git-config in the fact that no conversion error is ever raised. For boolean values no value, 'true' (any case) and 'false' (any case) are considered true, numbers are true if not zero; all other values (even invalid for bool) are considered false. For integer values value suffix of 'k', 'm', or 'g' following decimal number will cause the value to be multiplied by 1024, 1048576, or 1073741824; other values are returned as-is, only whitespace stripped. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
17 years ago
# repository configuration
our $config_file = '';
our %config;
# store multiple values for single key as anonymous array reference
# single values stored directly in the hash, not as [ <value> ]
sub hash_set_multi {
my ($hash, $key, $value) = @_;
if (!exists $hash->{$key}) {
$hash->{$key} = $value;
} elsif (!ref $hash->{$key}) {
$hash->{$key} = [ $hash->{$key}, $value ];
} else {
push @{$hash->{$key}}, $value;
}
}
# return hash of git project configuration
# optionally limited to some section, e.g. 'gitweb'
sub git_parse_project_config {
my $section_regexp = shift;
my %config;
local $/ = "\0";
open my $fh, "-|", git_cmd(), "config", '-z', '-l',
or return;
while (my $keyval = <$fh>) {
chomp $keyval;
my ($key, $value) = split(/\n/, $keyval, 2);
hash_set_multi(\%config, $key, $value)
if (!defined $section_regexp || $key =~ /^(?:$section_regexp)\./o);
}
close $fh;
return %config;
}
# convert config value to boolean, 'true' or 'false'
# no value, number > 0, 'true' and 'yes' values are true
# rest of values are treated as false (never as error)
sub config_to_bool {
my $val = shift;
# strip leading and trailing whitespace
$val =~ s/^\s+//;
$val =~ s/\s+$//;
return (!defined $val || # section.key
($val =~ /^\d+$/ && $val) || # section.key = 1
($val =~ /^(?:true|yes)$/i)); # section.key = true
}
# convert config value to simple decimal number
# an optional value suffix of 'k', 'm', or 'g' will cause the value
# to be multiplied by 1024, 1048576, or 1073741824
sub config_to_int {
my $val = shift;
# strip leading and trailing whitespace
$val =~ s/^\s+//;
$val =~ s/\s+$//;
if (my ($num, $unit) = ($val =~ /^([0-9]*)([kmg])$/i)) {
$unit = lc($unit);
# unknown unit is treated as 1
return $num * ($unit eq 'g' ? 1073741824 :
$unit eq 'm' ? 1048576 :
$unit eq 'k' ? 1024 : 1);
}
return $val;
}
# convert config value to array reference, if needed
sub config_to_multi {
my $val = shift;
return ref($val) ? $val : (defined($val) ? [ $val ] : []);
gitweb: Read repo config using 'git config -z -l' Change git_get_project_config to run git-config only once per repository, without changing its signature (its calling convention). This means for example that it returns 'true' or 'false' when called with second argument '--bool', and not true or false value. Instead of calling 'git config [<type>] --get gitweb.<key>' once for each config variable, call 'git config -z -l' only once, parsing and saving its output to %config variable. This makes possible to add new per repository configuration without paying cost of forking once per variable checked. We can now allow repository description and repository URLs to be stored in config file without badly affecting gitweb performance. For now only configuration variables for 'gitweb' section are stored. Multiple values for single configuration variable are stored as anonymous array reference; configuration variable with no value is stored as undef. Converting configuration variable values to boolean or integer value are done in Perl. Results differ from git-config in the fact that no conversion error is ever raised. For boolean values no value, 'true' (any case) and 'false' (any case) are considered true, numbers are true if not zero; all other values (even invalid for bool) are considered false. For integer values value suffix of 'k', 'm', or 'g' following decimal number will cause the value to be multiplied by 1024, 1048576, or 1073741824; other values are returned as-is, only whitespace stripped. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
17 years ago
}
sub git_get_project_config {
my ($key, $type) = @_;
gitweb: Read repo config using 'git config -z -l' Change git_get_project_config to run git-config only once per repository, without changing its signature (its calling convention). This means for example that it returns 'true' or 'false' when called with second argument '--bool', and not true or false value. Instead of calling 'git config [<type>] --get gitweb.<key>' once for each config variable, call 'git config -z -l' only once, parsing and saving its output to %config variable. This makes possible to add new per repository configuration without paying cost of forking once per variable checked. We can now allow repository description and repository URLs to be stored in config file without badly affecting gitweb performance. For now only configuration variables for 'gitweb' section are stored. Multiple values for single configuration variable are stored as anonymous array reference; configuration variable with no value is stored as undef. Converting configuration variable values to boolean or integer value are done in Perl. Results differ from git-config in the fact that no conversion error is ever raised. For boolean values no value, 'true' (any case) and 'false' (any case) are considered true, numbers are true if not zero; all other values (even invalid for bool) are considered false. For integer values value suffix of 'k', 'm', or 'g' following decimal number will cause the value to be multiplied by 1024, 1048576, or 1073741824; other values are returned as-is, only whitespace stripped. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
17 years ago
# key sanity check
return unless ($key);
$key =~ s/^gitweb\.//;
return if ($key =~ m/\W/);
gitweb: Read repo config using 'git config -z -l' Change git_get_project_config to run git-config only once per repository, without changing its signature (its calling convention). This means for example that it returns 'true' or 'false' when called with second argument '--bool', and not true or false value. Instead of calling 'git config [<type>] --get gitweb.<key>' once for each config variable, call 'git config -z -l' only once, parsing and saving its output to %config variable. This makes possible to add new per repository configuration without paying cost of forking once per variable checked. We can now allow repository description and repository URLs to be stored in config file without badly affecting gitweb performance. For now only configuration variables for 'gitweb' section are stored. Multiple values for single configuration variable are stored as anonymous array reference; configuration variable with no value is stored as undef. Converting configuration variable values to boolean or integer value are done in Perl. Results differ from git-config in the fact that no conversion error is ever raised. For boolean values no value, 'true' (any case) and 'false' (any case) are considered true, numbers are true if not zero; all other values (even invalid for bool) are considered false. For integer values value suffix of 'k', 'm', or 'g' following decimal number will cause the value to be multiplied by 1024, 1048576, or 1073741824; other values are returned as-is, only whitespace stripped. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
17 years ago
# type sanity check
if (defined $type) {
$type =~ s/^--//;
$type = undef
unless ($type eq 'bool' || $type eq 'int');
}
# get config
if (!defined $config_file ||
$config_file ne "$git_dir/config") {
%config = git_parse_project_config('gitweb');
$config_file = "$git_dir/config";
}
# ensure given type
if (!defined $type) {
return $config{"gitweb.$key"};
} elsif ($type eq 'bool') {
# backward compatibility: 'git config --bool' returns true/false
return config_to_bool($config{"gitweb.$key"}) ? 'true' : 'false';
} elsif ($type eq 'int') {
return config_to_int($config{"gitweb.$key"});
}
return $config{"gitweb.$key"};
}
# get hash of given path at given ref
sub git_get_hash_by_path {
my $base = shift;
my $path = shift || return undef;
my $type = shift;
$path =~ s,/+$,,;
open my $fd, "-|", git_cmd(), "ls-tree", $base, "--", $path
or die_error(500, "Open git-ls-tree failed");
my $line = <$fd>;
close $fd or return undef;
if (!defined $line) {
# there is no tree or hash given by $path at $base
return undef;
}
#'100644 blob 0fa3f3a66fb6a137f6ec2c19351ed4d807070ffa panic.c'
$line =~ m/^([0-9]+) (.+) ([0-9a-fA-F]{40})\t/;
if (defined $type && $type ne $2) {
# type doesn't match
return undef;
}
return $3;
}
gitweb: Add combined diff support to git_difftree_body You have to pass all parents as final parameters of git_difftree_body subroutine; the number of parents of a diff must be equal to the number derived from parsing git-diff-tree output, raw combined diff for git_difftree_body to display combined diff correctly (but it is not checked). Currently the possibility of displaying diffree of combined diff is not used in gitweb code; git_difftree_body is always caled for ordinary diff, and with only one parent. Description of output for combined diff: ---------------------------------------- The difftree table for combined diff starts with a cell with pathname of changed blob (changed file), which if possible is hidden link (class="list") to the 'blob' view of final version (if it exists), like for difftree for ordinary diff. If file was deleted in the final commit then filename is not hyperlinked. There is no cell with single file status (new, deleted, mode change, rename), as for combined diff as there is no single status: different parents might have different status. If git_difftree_body was called from git_commitdiff (for 'commitdiff' action) there is inner link to anchor to appropriate fragment (patch) in patchset body; the "patch" link does not replace "diff" link like for ordinary diff. Each of "diff" links is in separate cell, contrary to output for ordinary diff in which all links are (at least for now) in a single cell. For each parent, if file was not present we leave cell empty. If file was deleted in the result, we provide link to 'blob' view. Otherwise we provide link to 'commitdiff' view, even if patch (diff) consist only of extended diff header, and contents is not changed (pure rename, pure mode change). The only difference is that link to "blobdiff" view with no contents change is with 'nochange' class. At last, there is provided link to current version of file as "blob" link, if the file was not deleted in the result, and lik to history of a file, if there exists one. (The link to file history might be confused, at least for now, by renames.) Note that git-diff-tree raw output dor combined diff does not provide filename before change for renames and copies; we use git_get_path_by_hash to get "src" filename for renames (this means additional call to git-ls-tree for a _whole_ tree). Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
# get path of entry with given hash at given tree-ish (ref)
# used to get 'from' filename for combined diff (merge commit) for renames
sub git_get_path_by_hash {
my $base = shift || return;
my $hash = shift || return;
local $/ = "\0";
open my $fd, "-|", git_cmd(), "ls-tree", '-r', '-t', '-z', $base
or return undef;
while (my $line = <$fd>) {
chomp $line;
#'040000 tree 595596a6a9117ddba9fe379b6b012b558bac8423 gitweb'
#'100644 blob e02e90f0429be0d2a69b76571101f20b8f75530f gitweb/README'
if ($line =~ m/(?:[0-9]+) (?:.+) $hash\t(.+)$/) {
close $fd;
return $1;
}
}
close $fd;
return undef;
}
## ......................................................................
## git utility functions, directly accessing git repository
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
sub git_get_project_description {
20 years ago
my $path = shift;
20 years ago
$git_dir = "$projectroot/$path";
open my $fd, "$git_dir/description"
or return git_get_project_config('description');
20 years ago
my $descr = <$fd>;
close $fd;
if (defined $descr) {
chomp $descr;
}
20 years ago
return $descr;
20 years ago
}
sub git_get_project_ctags {
my $path = shift;
my $ctags = {};
$git_dir = "$projectroot/$path";
unless (opendir D, "$git_dir/ctags") {
return $ctags;
}
foreach (grep { -f $_ } map { "$git_dir/ctags/$_" } readdir(D)) {
open CT, $_ or next;
my $val = <CT>;
chomp $val;
close CT;
my $ctag = $_; $ctag =~ s#.*/##;
$ctags->{$ctag} = $val;
}
closedir D;
$ctags;
}
sub git_populate_project_tagcloud {
my $ctags = shift;
# First, merge different-cased tags; tags vote on casing
my %ctags_lc;
foreach (keys %$ctags) {
$ctags_lc{lc $_}->{count} += $ctags->{$_};
if (not $ctags_lc{lc $_}->{topcount}
or $ctags_lc{lc $_}->{topcount} < $ctags->{$_}) {
$ctags_lc{lc $_}->{topcount} = $ctags->{$_};
$ctags_lc{lc $_}->{topname} = $_;
}
}
my $cloud;
if (eval { require HTML::TagCloud; 1; }) {
$cloud = HTML::TagCloud->new;
foreach (sort keys %ctags_lc) {
# Pad the title with spaces so that the cloud looks
# less crammed.
my $title = $ctags_lc{$_}->{topname};
$title =~ s/ /&nbsp;/g;
$title =~ s/^/&nbsp;/g;
$title =~ s/$/&nbsp;/g;
$cloud->add($title, $home_link."?by_tag=".$_, $ctags_lc{$_}->{count});
}
} else {
$cloud = \%ctags_lc;
}
$cloud;
}
sub git_show_project_tagcloud {
my ($cloud, $count) = @_;
print STDERR ref($cloud)."..\n";
if (ref $cloud eq 'HTML::TagCloud') {
return $cloud->html_and_css($count);
} else {
my @tags = sort { $cloud->{$a}->{count} <=> $cloud->{$b}->{count} } keys %$cloud;
return '<p align="center">' . join (', ', map {
"<a href=\"$home_link?by_tag=$_\">$cloud->{$_}->{topname}</a>"
} splice(@tags, 0, $count)) . '</p>';
}
}
sub git_get_project_url_list {
my $path = shift;
$git_dir = "$projectroot/$path";
open my $fd, "$git_dir/cloneurl"
or return wantarray ?
@{ config_to_multi(git_get_project_config('url')) } :
config_to_multi(git_get_project_config('url'));
my @git_project_url_list = map { chomp; $_ } <$fd>;
close $fd;
return wantarray ? @git_project_url_list : \@git_project_url_list;
}
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
sub git_get_projects_list {
my ($filter) = @_;
my @list;
$filter ||= '';
$filter =~ s/\.git$//;
my $check_forks = gitweb_check_feature('forks');
if (-d $projects_list) {
# search in directory
my $dir = $projects_list . ($filter ? "/$filter" : '');
# remove the trailing "/"
$dir =~ s!/+$!!;
my $pfxlen = length("$dir");
my $pfxdepth = ($dir =~ tr!/!!);
File::Find::find({
follow_fast => 1, # follow symbolic links
follow_skip => 2, # ignore duplicates
dangling_symlinks => 0, # ignore dangling symlinks, silently
wanted => sub {
# skip project-list toplevel, if we get it.
return if (m!^[/.]$!);
# only directories can be git repositories
return unless (-d $_);
# don't traverse too deep (Find is super slow on os x)
if (($File::Find::name =~ tr!/!!) - $pfxdepth > $project_maxdepth) {
$File::Find::prune = 1;
return;
}
my $subdir = substr($File::Find::name, $pfxlen + 1);
# we check related file in $projectroot
my $path = ($filter ? "$filter/" : '') . $subdir;
if (check_export_ok("$projectroot/$path")) {
push @list, { path => $path };
$File::Find::prune = 1;
}
},
}, "$dir");
} elsif (-f $projects_list) {
# read from file(url-encoded):
# 'git%2Fgit.git Linus+Torvalds'
# 'libs%2Fklibc%2Fklibc.git H.+Peter+Anvin'
# 'linux%2Fhotplug%2Fudev.git Greg+Kroah-Hartman'
my %paths;
open my ($fd), $projects_list or return;
PROJECT:
while (my $line = <$fd>) {
chomp $line;
my ($path, $owner) = split ' ', $line;
$path = unescape($path);
$owner = unescape($owner);
if (!defined $path) {
next;
}
if ($filter ne '') {
# looking for forks;
my $pfx = substr($path, 0, length($filter));
if ($pfx ne $filter) {
next PROJECT;
}
my $sfx = substr($path, length($filter));
if ($sfx !~ /^\/.*\.git$/) {
next PROJECT;
}
} elsif ($check_forks) {
PATH:
foreach my $filter (keys %paths) {
# looking for forks;
my $pfx = substr($path, 0, length($filter));
if ($pfx ne $filter) {
next PATH;
}
my $sfx = substr($path, length($filter));
if ($sfx !~ /^\/.*\.git$/) {
next PATH;
}
# is a fork, don't include it in
# the list
next PROJECT;
}
}
if (check_export_ok("$projectroot/$path")) {
my $pr = {
path => $path,
owner => to_utf8($owner),
};
push @list, $pr;
(my $forks_path = $path) =~ s/\.git$//;
$paths{$forks_path}++;
}
}
close $fd;
}
return @list;
}
our $gitweb_project_owner = undef;
sub git_get_project_list_from_file {
return if (defined $gitweb_project_owner);
$gitweb_project_owner = {};
# read from file (url-encoded):
# 'git%2Fgit.git Linus+Torvalds'
# 'libs%2Fklibc%2Fklibc.git H.+Peter+Anvin'
# 'linux%2Fhotplug%2Fudev.git Greg+Kroah-Hartman'
if (-f $projects_list) {
open (my $fd , $projects_list);
while (my $line = <$fd>) {
chomp $line;
my ($pr, $ow) = split ' ', $line;
$pr = unescape($pr);
$ow = unescape($ow);
$gitweb_project_owner->{$pr} = to_utf8($ow);
}
close $fd;
}
}
sub git_get_project_owner {
my $project = shift;
my $owner;
return undef unless $project;
$git_dir = "$projectroot/$project";
if (!defined $gitweb_project_owner) {
git_get_project_list_from_file();
}
if (exists $gitweb_project_owner->{$project}) {
$owner = $gitweb_project_owner->{$project};
}
if (!defined $owner){
$owner = git_get_project_config('owner');
}
if (!defined $owner) {
$owner = get_file_owner("$git_dir");
}
return $owner;
}
sub git_get_last_activity {
my ($path) = @_;
my $fd;
$git_dir = "$projectroot/$path";
open($fd, "-|", git_cmd(), 'for-each-ref',
'--format=%(committer)',
'--sort=-committerdate',
'--count=1',
'refs/heads') or return;
my $most_recent = <$fd>;
close $fd or return;
if (defined $most_recent &&
$most_recent =~ / (\d+) [-+][01]\d\d\d$/) {
my $timestamp = $1;
my $age = time - $timestamp;
return ($age, age_string($age));
}
return (undef, undef);
}
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
sub git_get_references {
my $type = shift || "";
my %refs;
# 5dc01c595e6c6ec9ccda4f6f69c131c0dd945f8c refs/tags/v2.6.11
# c39ae07f393806ccf406ef966e9a15afc43cc36a refs/tags/v2.6.11^{}
open my $fd, "-|", git_cmd(), "show-ref", "--dereference",
($type ? ("--", "refs/$type") : ()) # use -- <pattern> if $type
or return;
while (my $line = <$fd>) {
chomp $line;
if ($line =~ m!^([0-9a-fA-F]{40})\srefs/($type.*)$!) {
if (defined $refs{$1}) {
push @{$refs{$1}}, $2;
} else {
$refs{$1} = [ $2 ];
}
}
}
close $fd or return;
return \%refs;
}
sub git_get_rev_name_tags {
my $hash = shift || return undef;
open my $fd, "-|", git_cmd(), "name-rev", "--tags", $hash
or return;
my $name_rev = <$fd>;
close $fd;
if ($name_rev =~ m|^$hash tags/(.*)$|) {
return $1;
} else {
# catches also '$hash undefined' output
return undef;
}
}
## ----------------------------------------------------------------------
## parse to hash functions
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
sub parse_date {
my $epoch = shift;
my $tz = shift || "-0000";
my %date;
my @months = ("Jan", "Feb", "Mar", "Apr", "May", "Jun", "Jul", "Aug", "Sep", "Oct", "Nov", "Dec");
my @days = ("Sun", "Mon", "Tue", "Wed", "Thu", "Fri", "Sat");
my ($sec, $min, $hour, $mday, $mon, $year, $wday, $yday) = gmtime($epoch);
$date{'hour'} = $hour;
$date{'minute'} = $min;
$date{'mday'} = $mday;
$date{'day'} = $days[$wday];
$date{'month'} = $months[$mon];
gitweb: Refactor feed generation, make output prettier, add Atom feed Add support for more modern Atom web feed format. Both RSS and Atom feeds are generated by git_feed subroutine to avoid code duplication; git_rss and git_atom are thin wrappers around git_feed. Add links to Atom feed in HTML header and in page footer (but not in OPML; we should use APP, Atom Publishing Proptocol instead). Allow for feed generation for branches other than current (HEAD) branch, and for generation of feeds for file or directory history. Do not use "pre ${\sub_returning_scalar(...)} post" trick, but join strings instead: "pre " . sub_returning_scalar(...) . " post". Use href(-full=>1, ...) instead of hand-crafting gitweb urls. Make output prettier: * Use title similar to the title of web page * Use project description (if exists) for description/subtitle * Do not add anything (committer name, commit date) to feed entry title * Wrap the commit message in <pre> * Make file names into an unordered list * Add links (diff, conditional blame, history) to the file list. In addition to the above points, the attached patch emits a Last-Changed: HTTP response header field, and doesn't compute the feed body if the HTTP request type was HEAD. This helps keep the web server load down for well-behaved feed readers that check if the feed needs updating. If browser (feed reader) sent Accept: header, and it prefers 'text/xml' type to 'application/rss+xml' (in the case of RSS feed) or 'application/atom+xml' (in the case of Atom feed), then use 'text/xml' as content type. Both RSS and Atom feeds validate at http://feedvalidator.org and at http://validator.w3.org/feed/ Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Andreas Fuchs <asf@boinkor.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
$date{'rfc2822'} = sprintf "%s, %d %s %4d %02d:%02d:%02d +0000",
$days[$wday], $mday, $months[$mon], 1900+$year, $hour ,$min, $sec;
$date{'mday-time'} = sprintf "%d %s %02d:%02d",
$mday, $months[$mon], $hour ,$min;
gitweb: Refactor feed generation, make output prettier, add Atom feed Add support for more modern Atom web feed format. Both RSS and Atom feeds are generated by git_feed subroutine to avoid code duplication; git_rss and git_atom are thin wrappers around git_feed. Add links to Atom feed in HTML header and in page footer (but not in OPML; we should use APP, Atom Publishing Proptocol instead). Allow for feed generation for branches other than current (HEAD) branch, and for generation of feeds for file or directory history. Do not use "pre ${\sub_returning_scalar(...)} post" trick, but join strings instead: "pre " . sub_returning_scalar(...) . " post". Use href(-full=>1, ...) instead of hand-crafting gitweb urls. Make output prettier: * Use title similar to the title of web page * Use project description (if exists) for description/subtitle * Do not add anything (committer name, commit date) to feed entry title * Wrap the commit message in <pre> * Make file names into an unordered list * Add links (diff, conditional blame, history) to the file list. In addition to the above points, the attached patch emits a Last-Changed: HTTP response header field, and doesn't compute the feed body if the HTTP request type was HEAD. This helps keep the web server load down for well-behaved feed readers that check if the feed needs updating. If browser (feed reader) sent Accept: header, and it prefers 'text/xml' type to 'application/rss+xml' (in the case of RSS feed) or 'application/atom+xml' (in the case of Atom feed), then use 'text/xml' as content type. Both RSS and Atom feeds validate at http://feedvalidator.org and at http://validator.w3.org/feed/ Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Andreas Fuchs <asf@boinkor.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
$date{'iso-8601'} = sprintf "%04d-%02d-%02dT%02d:%02d:%02dZ",
1900+$year, 1+$mon, $mday, $hour ,$min, $sec;
$tz =~ m/^([+\-][0-9][0-9])([0-9][0-9])$/;
my $local = $epoch + ((int $1 + ($2/60)) * 3600);
($sec, $min, $hour, $mday, $mon, $year, $wday, $yday) = gmtime($local);
$date{'hour_local'} = $hour;
$date{'minute_local'} = $min;
$date{'tz_local'} = $tz;
gitweb: Refactor feed generation, make output prettier, add Atom feed Add support for more modern Atom web feed format. Both RSS and Atom feeds are generated by git_feed subroutine to avoid code duplication; git_rss and git_atom are thin wrappers around git_feed. Add links to Atom feed in HTML header and in page footer (but not in OPML; we should use APP, Atom Publishing Proptocol instead). Allow for feed generation for branches other than current (HEAD) branch, and for generation of feeds for file or directory history. Do not use "pre ${\sub_returning_scalar(...)} post" trick, but join strings instead: "pre " . sub_returning_scalar(...) . " post". Use href(-full=>1, ...) instead of hand-crafting gitweb urls. Make output prettier: * Use title similar to the title of web page * Use project description (if exists) for description/subtitle * Do not add anything (committer name, commit date) to feed entry title * Wrap the commit message in <pre> * Make file names into an unordered list * Add links (diff, conditional blame, history) to the file list. In addition to the above points, the attached patch emits a Last-Changed: HTTP response header field, and doesn't compute the feed body if the HTTP request type was HEAD. This helps keep the web server load down for well-behaved feed readers that check if the feed needs updating. If browser (feed reader) sent Accept: header, and it prefers 'text/xml' type to 'application/rss+xml' (in the case of RSS feed) or 'application/atom+xml' (in the case of Atom feed), then use 'text/xml' as content type. Both RSS and Atom feeds validate at http://feedvalidator.org and at http://validator.w3.org/feed/ Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Andreas Fuchs <asf@boinkor.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
$date{'iso-tz'} = sprintf("%04d-%02d-%02d %02d:%02d:%02d %s",
1900+$year, $mon+1, $mday,
$hour, $min, $sec, $tz);
return %date;
}
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
sub parse_tag {
20 years ago
my $tag_id = shift;
my %tag;
20 years ago
my @comment;
20 years ago
open my $fd, "-|", git_cmd(), "cat-file", "tag", $tag_id or return;
20 years ago
$tag{'id'} = $tag_id;
20 years ago
while (my $line = <$fd>) {
chomp $line;
if ($line =~ m/^object ([0-9a-fA-F]{40})$/) {
$tag{'object'} = $1;
20 years ago
} elsif ($line =~ m/^type (.+)$/) {
20 years ago
$tag{'type'} = $1;
20 years ago
} elsif ($line =~ m/^tag (.+)$/) {
20 years ago
$tag{'name'} = $1;
20 years ago
} elsif ($line =~ m/^tagger (.*) ([0-9]+) (.*)$/) {
$tag{'author'} = $1;
$tag{'epoch'} = $2;
$tag{'tz'} = $3;
} elsif ($line =~ m/--BEGIN/) {
push @comment, $line;
last;
} elsif ($line eq "") {
last;
20 years ago
}
}
20 years ago
push @comment, <$fd>;
$tag{'comment'} = \@comment;
20 years ago
close $fd or return;
20 years ago
if (!defined $tag{'name'}) {
return
};
return %tag
}
sub parse_commit_text {
my ($commit_text, $withparents) = @_;
my @commit_lines = split '\n', $commit_text;
20 years ago
my %co;
pop @commit_lines; # Remove '\0'
if (! @commit_lines) {
return;
}
my $header = shift @commit_lines;
if ($header !~ m/^[0-9a-fA-F]{40}/) {
return;
}
($co{'id'}, my @parents) = split ' ', $header;
20 years ago
while (my $line = shift @commit_lines) {
20 years ago
last if $line eq "\n";
20 years ago
if ($line =~ m/^tree ([0-9a-fA-F]{40})$/) {
20 years ago
$co{'tree'} = $1;
} elsif ((!defined $withparents) && ($line =~ m/^parent ([0-9a-fA-F]{40})$/)) {
push @parents, $1;
20 years ago
} elsif ($line =~ m/^author (.*) ([0-9]+) (.*)$/) {
20 years ago
$co{'author'} = $1;
20 years ago
$co{'author_epoch'} = $2;
$co{'author_tz'} = $3;
if ($co{'author'} =~ m/^([^<]+) <([^>]*)>/) {
$co{'author_name'} = $1;
$co{'author_email'} = $2;
20 years ago
} else {
$co{'author_name'} = $co{'author'};
}
20 years ago
} elsif ($line =~ m/^committer (.*) ([0-9]+) (.*)$/) {
$co{'committer'} = $1;
20 years ago
$co{'committer_epoch'} = $2;
$co{'committer_tz'} = $3;
20 years ago
$co{'committer_name'} = $co{'committer'};
if ($co{'committer'} =~ m/^([^<]+) <([^>]*)>/) {
$co{'committer_name'} = $1;
$co{'committer_email'} = $2;
} else {
$co{'committer_name'} = $co{'committer'};
}
20 years ago
}
}
20 years ago
if (!defined $co{'tree'}) {
return;
20 years ago
};
$co{'parents'} = \@parents;
$co{'parent'} = $parents[0];
20 years ago
foreach my $title (@commit_lines) {
$title =~ s/^ //;
20 years ago
if ($title ne "") {
$co{'title'} = chop_str($title, 80, 5);
20 years ago
# remove leading stuff of merges to make the interesting part visible
if (length($title) > 50) {
$title =~ s/^Automatic //;
$title =~ s/^merge (of|with) /Merge ... /i;
if (length($title) > 50) {
$title =~ s/(http|rsync):\/\///;
}
if (length($title) > 50) {
$title =~ s/(master|www|rsync)\.//;
}
if (length($title) > 50) {
$title =~ s/kernel.org:?//;
}
if (length($title) > 50) {
$title =~ s/\/pub\/scm//;
}
}
$co{'title_short'} = chop_str($title, 50, 5);
20 years ago
last;
}
}
if (! defined $co{'title'} || $co{'title'} eq "") {
$co{'title'} = $co{'title_short'} = '(no commit message)';
}
# remove added spaces
foreach my $line (@commit_lines) {
$line =~ s/^ //;
}
$co{'comment'} = \@commit_lines;
20 years ago
my $age = time - $co{'committer_epoch'};
$co{'age'} = $age;
20 years ago
$co{'age_string'} = age_string($age);
20 years ago
my ($sec, $min, $hour, $mday, $mon, $year, $wday, $yday) = gmtime($co{'committer_epoch'});
if ($age > 60*60*24*7*2) {
20 years ago
$co{'age_string_date'} = sprintf "%4i-%02u-%02i", 1900 + $year, $mon+1, $mday;
20 years ago
$co{'age_string_age'} = $co{'age_string'};
} else {
$co{'age_string_date'} = $co{'age_string'};
20 years ago
$co{'age_string_age'} = sprintf "%4i-%02u-%02i", 1900 + $year, $mon+1, $mday;
20 years ago
}
20 years ago
return %co;
}
sub parse_commit {
my ($commit_id) = @_;
my %co;
local $/ = "\0";
open my $fd, "-|", git_cmd(), "rev-list",
"--parents",
"--header",
"--max-count=1",
$commit_id,
"--",
or die_error(500, "Open git-rev-list failed");
%co = parse_commit_text(<$fd>, 1);
close $fd;
return %co;
}
sub parse_commits {
my ($commit_id, $maxcount, $skip, $filename, @args) = @_;
my @cos;
$maxcount ||= 1;
$skip ||= 0;
local $/ = "\0";
open my $fd, "-|", git_cmd(), "rev-list",
"--header",
@args,
("--max-count=" . $maxcount),
("--skip=" . $skip),
@extra_options,
$commit_id,
"--",
($filename ? ($filename) : ())
or die_error(500, "Open git-rev-list failed");
while (my $line = <$fd>) {
my %co = parse_commit_text($line);
push @cos, \%co;
}
close $fd;
return wantarray ? @cos : \@cos;
}
# parse line of git-diff-tree "raw" output
sub parse_difftree_raw_line {
my $line = shift;
my %res;
# ':100644 100644 03b218260e99b78c6df0ed378e59ed9205ccc96d 3b93d5e7cc7f7dd4ebed13a5cc1a4ad976fc94d8 M ls-files.c'
# ':100644 100644 7f9281985086971d3877aca27704f2aaf9c448ce bc190ebc71bbd923f2b728e505408f5e54bd073a M rev-tree.c'
if ($line =~ m/^:([0-7]{6}) ([0-7]{6}) ([0-9a-fA-F]{40}) ([0-9a-fA-F]{40}) (.)([0-9]{0,3})\t(.*)$/) {
$res{'from_mode'} = $1;
$res{'to_mode'} = $2;
$res{'from_id'} = $3;
$res{'to_id'} = $4;
$res{'status'} = $5;
$res{'similarity'} = $6;
if ($res{'status'} eq 'R' || $res{'status'} eq 'C') { # renamed or copied
($res{'from_file'}, $res{'to_file'}) = map { unquote($_) } split("\t", $7);
} else {
$res{'from_file'} = $res{'to_file'} = $res{'file'} = unquote($7);
}
}
# '::100755 100755 100755 60e79ca1b01bc8b057abe17ddab484699a7f5fdb 94067cc5f73388f33722d52ae02f44692bc07490 94067cc5f73388f33722d52ae02f44692bc07490 MR git-gui/git-gui.sh'
# combined diff (for merge commit)
elsif ($line =~ s/^(::+)((?:[0-7]{6} )+)((?:[0-9a-fA-F]{40} )+)([a-zA-Z]+)\t(.*)$//) {
$res{'nparents'} = length($1);
$res{'from_mode'} = [ split(' ', $2) ];
$res{'to_mode'} = pop @{$res{'from_mode'}};
$res{'from_id'} = [ split(' ', $3) ];
$res{'to_id'} = pop @{$res{'from_id'}};
$res{'status'} = [ split('', $4) ];
$res{'to_file'} = unquote($5);
}
# 'c512b523472485aef4fff9e57b229d9d243c967f'
elsif ($line =~ m/^([0-9a-fA-F]{40})$/) {
$res{'commit'} = $1;
}
return wantarray ? %res : \%res;
}
gitweb: Fix and simplify "split patch" detection There are some cases when one line from "raw" git-diff output (raw format) corresponds to more than one patch in the patchset git-diff output; we call this situation "split patch". Old code misdetected subsequent patches (for different files) with the same pre-image and post-image as fragments of "split patch", leading to mislabeled from-file/to-file diff header etc. Old code used pre-image and post-image SHA-1 identifier ('from_id' and 'to_id') to check if current patch corresponds to old raw diff format line, to find if one difftree raw line coresponds to more than one patch in the patch format. Now we use post-image filename for that. This assumes that post-image filename alone can be used to identify difftree raw line. In the case this changes (which is unlikely considering current diff engine) we can add 'from_id' and 'to_id' to detect "patch splitting" together with 'to_file'. Because old code got pre-image and post-image SHA-1 identifier for the patch from the "index" line in extended diff header, diff header had to be buffered. New code takes post-image filename from "git diff" header, which is first line of a patch; this allows to simplify git_patchset_body code. A side effect of resigning diff header buffering is that there is always "diff extended_header" div, even if extended diff header is empty. Alternate solution would be to check when git splits patches, and do not check if parsed info from current patch corresponds to current or next raw diff format output line. Git splits patches only for 'T' (typechange) status filepair, and there always two patches corresponding to one raw diff line. It was not used because it would tie gitweb code to minute details of git diff output. While at it, use newly introduced parsed_difftree_line wrapper subroutine in git_difftree_body. Noticed-by: Yann Dirson <ydirson@altern.org> Diagnosed-by: Petr Baudis <pasky@suse.cz> Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
17 years ago
# wrapper: return parsed line of git-diff-tree "raw" output
# (the argument might be raw line, or parsed info)
sub parsed_difftree_line {
my $line_or_ref = shift;
if (ref($line_or_ref) eq "HASH") {
# pre-parsed (or generated by hand)
return $line_or_ref;
} else {
return parse_difftree_raw_line($line_or_ref);
}
}
# parse line of git-ls-tree output
sub parse_ls_tree_line ($;%) {
my $line = shift;
my %opts = @_;
my %res;
#'100644 blob 0fa3f3a66fb6a137f6ec2c19351ed4d807070ffa panic.c'
$line =~ m/^([0-9]+) (.+) ([0-9a-fA-F]{40})\t(.+)$/s;
$res{'mode'} = $1;
$res{'type'} = $2;
$res{'hash'} = $3;
if ($opts{'-z'}) {
$res{'name'} = $4;
} else {
$res{'name'} = unquote($4);
}
return wantarray ? %res : \%res;
}
# generates _two_ hashes, references to which are passed as 2 and 3 argument
sub parse_from_to_diffinfo {
my ($diffinfo, $from, $to, @parents) = @_;
if ($diffinfo->{'nparents'}) {
# combined diff
$from->{'file'} = [];
$from->{'href'} = [];
fill_from_file_info($diffinfo, @parents)
unless exists $diffinfo->{'from_file'};
for (my $i = 0; $i < $diffinfo->{'nparents'}; $i++) {
$from->{'file'}[$i] =
defined $diffinfo->{'from_file'}[$i] ?
$diffinfo->{'from_file'}[$i] :
$diffinfo->{'to_file'};
if ($diffinfo->{'status'}[$i] ne "A") { # not new (added) file
$from->{'href'}[$i] = href(action=>"blob",
hash_base=>$parents[$i],
hash=>$diffinfo->{'from_id'}[$i],
file_name=>$from->{'file'}[$i]);
} else {
$from->{'href'}[$i] = undef;
}
}
} else {
gitweb: Fix and simplify "split patch" detection There are some cases when one line from "raw" git-diff output (raw format) corresponds to more than one patch in the patchset git-diff output; we call this situation "split patch". Old code misdetected subsequent patches (for different files) with the same pre-image and post-image as fragments of "split patch", leading to mislabeled from-file/to-file diff header etc. Old code used pre-image and post-image SHA-1 identifier ('from_id' and 'to_id') to check if current patch corresponds to old raw diff format line, to find if one difftree raw line coresponds to more than one patch in the patch format. Now we use post-image filename for that. This assumes that post-image filename alone can be used to identify difftree raw line. In the case this changes (which is unlikely considering current diff engine) we can add 'from_id' and 'to_id' to detect "patch splitting" together with 'to_file'. Because old code got pre-image and post-image SHA-1 identifier for the patch from the "index" line in extended diff header, diff header had to be buffered. New code takes post-image filename from "git diff" header, which is first line of a patch; this allows to simplify git_patchset_body code. A side effect of resigning diff header buffering is that there is always "diff extended_header" div, even if extended diff header is empty. Alternate solution would be to check when git splits patches, and do not check if parsed info from current patch corresponds to current or next raw diff format output line. Git splits patches only for 'T' (typechange) status filepair, and there always two patches corresponding to one raw diff line. It was not used because it would tie gitweb code to minute details of git diff output. While at it, use newly introduced parsed_difftree_line wrapper subroutine in git_difftree_body. Noticed-by: Yann Dirson <ydirson@altern.org> Diagnosed-by: Petr Baudis <pasky@suse.cz> Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
17 years ago
# ordinary (not combined) diff
$from->{'file'} = $diffinfo->{'from_file'};
if ($diffinfo->{'status'} ne "A") { # not new (added) file
$from->{'href'} = href(action=>"blob", hash_base=>$hash_parent,
hash=>$diffinfo->{'from_id'},
file_name=>$from->{'file'});
} else {
delete $from->{'href'};
}
}
$to->{'file'} = $diffinfo->{'to_file'};
if (!is_deleted($diffinfo)) { # file exists in result
$to->{'href'} = href(action=>"blob", hash_base=>$hash,
hash=>$diffinfo->{'to_id'},
file_name=>$to->{'file'});
} else {
delete $to->{'href'};
}
}
## ......................................................................
## parse to array of hashes functions
20 years ago
gitweb: Use git-for-each-ref to generate list of heads and/or tags Add two subroutines: git_get_heads_list and git_get_refs_list, which fill out needed parts of refs info (heads and tags respectively) info using single call to git-for-each-ref, instead of using git-peek-remote to get list of references and using parse_ref for each ref to get ref info, which in turn uses at least one call of git command. Replace call to git_get_refs_list in git_summary by call to git_get_references, git_get_heads_list and git_get_tags_list (simplifying this subroutine a bit). Use git_get_heads_list in git_heads and git_get_tags_list in git_tags. Modify git_tags_body slightly to accept output from git_get_tags_list. Remove no longer used, and a bit hackish, git_get_refs_list. parse_ref is no longer used, but is left for now. Generating "summary" and "tags" views should be much faster for projects which have large number of tags. CHANGES IN OUTPUT: Before, if ref in refs/tags was tag pointing to commit we used committer epoch as epoch for ref, and used tagger epoch as epoch only for tag pointing to object of other type. If ref in refs/tags was commit, we used committer epoch as epoch for ref (see parse_ref; we sorted in gitweb by 'epoch' field). Currently we use committer epoch for refs pointing to commit objects, and tagger epoch for refs pointing to tag object, even if tag points to commit. Simple ab benchmark before and after this patch for my git.git repository (git/jnareb-git.git) with some heads and tags added as compared to git.git repository, shows around 2.4-3.0 times speedup for "summary" and "tags" views: summary 3134 +/- 24.2 ms --> 1081 +/- 30.2 ms tags 2886 +/- 18.9 ms --> 1196 +/- 15.6 ms Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
sub git_get_heads_list {
my $limit = shift;
my @headslist;
open my $fd, '-|', git_cmd(), 'for-each-ref',
($limit ? '--count='.($limit+1) : ()), '--sort=-committerdate',
'--format=%(objectname) %(refname) %(subject)%00%(committer)',
'refs/heads'
or return;
while (my $line = <$fd>) {
gitweb: Use git-for-each-ref to generate list of heads and/or tags Add two subroutines: git_get_heads_list and git_get_refs_list, which fill out needed parts of refs info (heads and tags respectively) info using single call to git-for-each-ref, instead of using git-peek-remote to get list of references and using parse_ref for each ref to get ref info, which in turn uses at least one call of git command. Replace call to git_get_refs_list in git_summary by call to git_get_references, git_get_heads_list and git_get_tags_list (simplifying this subroutine a bit). Use git_get_heads_list in git_heads and git_get_tags_list in git_tags. Modify git_tags_body slightly to accept output from git_get_tags_list. Remove no longer used, and a bit hackish, git_get_refs_list. parse_ref is no longer used, but is left for now. Generating "summary" and "tags" views should be much faster for projects which have large number of tags. CHANGES IN OUTPUT: Before, if ref in refs/tags was tag pointing to commit we used committer epoch as epoch for ref, and used tagger epoch as epoch only for tag pointing to object of other type. If ref in refs/tags was commit, we used committer epoch as epoch for ref (see parse_ref; we sorted in gitweb by 'epoch' field). Currently we use committer epoch for refs pointing to commit objects, and tagger epoch for refs pointing to tag object, even if tag points to commit. Simple ab benchmark before and after this patch for my git.git repository (git/jnareb-git.git) with some heads and tags added as compared to git.git repository, shows around 2.4-3.0 times speedup for "summary" and "tags" views: summary 3134 +/- 24.2 ms --> 1081 +/- 30.2 ms tags 2886 +/- 18.9 ms --> 1196 +/- 15.6 ms Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
my %ref_item;
gitweb: Use git-for-each-ref to generate list of heads and/or tags Add two subroutines: git_get_heads_list and git_get_refs_list, which fill out needed parts of refs info (heads and tags respectively) info using single call to git-for-each-ref, instead of using git-peek-remote to get list of references and using parse_ref for each ref to get ref info, which in turn uses at least one call of git command. Replace call to git_get_refs_list in git_summary by call to git_get_references, git_get_heads_list and git_get_tags_list (simplifying this subroutine a bit). Use git_get_heads_list in git_heads and git_get_tags_list in git_tags. Modify git_tags_body slightly to accept output from git_get_tags_list. Remove no longer used, and a bit hackish, git_get_refs_list. parse_ref is no longer used, but is left for now. Generating "summary" and "tags" views should be much faster for projects which have large number of tags. CHANGES IN OUTPUT: Before, if ref in refs/tags was tag pointing to commit we used committer epoch as epoch for ref, and used tagger epoch as epoch only for tag pointing to object of other type. If ref in refs/tags was commit, we used committer epoch as epoch for ref (see parse_ref; we sorted in gitweb by 'epoch' field). Currently we use committer epoch for refs pointing to commit objects, and tagger epoch for refs pointing to tag object, even if tag points to commit. Simple ab benchmark before and after this patch for my git.git repository (git/jnareb-git.git) with some heads and tags added as compared to git.git repository, shows around 2.4-3.0 times speedup for "summary" and "tags" views: summary 3134 +/- 24.2 ms --> 1081 +/- 30.2 ms tags 2886 +/- 18.9 ms --> 1196 +/- 15.6 ms Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
chomp $line;
my ($refinfo, $committerinfo) = split(/\0/, $line);
my ($hash, $name, $title) = split(' ', $refinfo, 3);
my ($committer, $epoch, $tz) =
($committerinfo =~ /^(.*) ([0-9]+) (.*)$/);
$ref_item{'fullname'} = $name;
gitweb: Use git-for-each-ref to generate list of heads and/or tags Add two subroutines: git_get_heads_list and git_get_refs_list, which fill out needed parts of refs info (heads and tags respectively) info using single call to git-for-each-ref, instead of using git-peek-remote to get list of references and using parse_ref for each ref to get ref info, which in turn uses at least one call of git command. Replace call to git_get_refs_list in git_summary by call to git_get_references, git_get_heads_list and git_get_tags_list (simplifying this subroutine a bit). Use git_get_heads_list in git_heads and git_get_tags_list in git_tags. Modify git_tags_body slightly to accept output from git_get_tags_list. Remove no longer used, and a bit hackish, git_get_refs_list. parse_ref is no longer used, but is left for now. Generating "summary" and "tags" views should be much faster for projects which have large number of tags. CHANGES IN OUTPUT: Before, if ref in refs/tags was tag pointing to commit we used committer epoch as epoch for ref, and used tagger epoch as epoch only for tag pointing to object of other type. If ref in refs/tags was commit, we used committer epoch as epoch for ref (see parse_ref; we sorted in gitweb by 'epoch' field). Currently we use committer epoch for refs pointing to commit objects, and tagger epoch for refs pointing to tag object, even if tag points to commit. Simple ab benchmark before and after this patch for my git.git repository (git/jnareb-git.git) with some heads and tags added as compared to git.git repository, shows around 2.4-3.0 times speedup for "summary" and "tags" views: summary 3134 +/- 24.2 ms --> 1081 +/- 30.2 ms tags 2886 +/- 18.9 ms --> 1196 +/- 15.6 ms Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
$name =~ s!^refs/heads/!!;
$ref_item{'name'} = $name;
$ref_item{'id'} = $hash;
$ref_item{'title'} = $title || '(no commit message)';
$ref_item{'epoch'} = $epoch;
if ($epoch) {
$ref_item{'age'} = age_string(time - $ref_item{'epoch'});
} else {
$ref_item{'age'} = "unknown";
}
gitweb: Use git-for-each-ref to generate list of heads and/or tags Add two subroutines: git_get_heads_list and git_get_refs_list, which fill out needed parts of refs info (heads and tags respectively) info using single call to git-for-each-ref, instead of using git-peek-remote to get list of references and using parse_ref for each ref to get ref info, which in turn uses at least one call of git command. Replace call to git_get_refs_list in git_summary by call to git_get_references, git_get_heads_list and git_get_tags_list (simplifying this subroutine a bit). Use git_get_heads_list in git_heads and git_get_tags_list in git_tags. Modify git_tags_body slightly to accept output from git_get_tags_list. Remove no longer used, and a bit hackish, git_get_refs_list. parse_ref is no longer used, but is left for now. Generating "summary" and "tags" views should be much faster for projects which have large number of tags. CHANGES IN OUTPUT: Before, if ref in refs/tags was tag pointing to commit we used committer epoch as epoch for ref, and used tagger epoch as epoch only for tag pointing to object of other type. If ref in refs/tags was commit, we used committer epoch as epoch for ref (see parse_ref; we sorted in gitweb by 'epoch' field). Currently we use committer epoch for refs pointing to commit objects, and tagger epoch for refs pointing to tag object, even if tag points to commit. Simple ab benchmark before and after this patch for my git.git repository (git/jnareb-git.git) with some heads and tags added as compared to git.git repository, shows around 2.4-3.0 times speedup for "summary" and "tags" views: summary 3134 +/- 24.2 ms --> 1081 +/- 30.2 ms tags 2886 +/- 18.9 ms --> 1196 +/- 15.6 ms Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
push @headslist, \%ref_item;
}
close $fd;
gitweb: Use git-for-each-ref to generate list of heads and/or tags Add two subroutines: git_get_heads_list and git_get_refs_list, which fill out needed parts of refs info (heads and tags respectively) info using single call to git-for-each-ref, instead of using git-peek-remote to get list of references and using parse_ref for each ref to get ref info, which in turn uses at least one call of git command. Replace call to git_get_refs_list in git_summary by call to git_get_references, git_get_heads_list and git_get_tags_list (simplifying this subroutine a bit). Use git_get_heads_list in git_heads and git_get_tags_list in git_tags. Modify git_tags_body slightly to accept output from git_get_tags_list. Remove no longer used, and a bit hackish, git_get_refs_list. parse_ref is no longer used, but is left for now. Generating "summary" and "tags" views should be much faster for projects which have large number of tags. CHANGES IN OUTPUT: Before, if ref in refs/tags was tag pointing to commit we used committer epoch as epoch for ref, and used tagger epoch as epoch only for tag pointing to object of other type. If ref in refs/tags was commit, we used committer epoch as epoch for ref (see parse_ref; we sorted in gitweb by 'epoch' field). Currently we use committer epoch for refs pointing to commit objects, and tagger epoch for refs pointing to tag object, even if tag points to commit. Simple ab benchmark before and after this patch for my git.git repository (git/jnareb-git.git) with some heads and tags added as compared to git.git repository, shows around 2.4-3.0 times speedup for "summary" and "tags" views: summary 3134 +/- 24.2 ms --> 1081 +/- 30.2 ms tags 2886 +/- 18.9 ms --> 1196 +/- 15.6 ms Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
return wantarray ? @headslist : \@headslist;
}
sub git_get_tags_list {
my $limit = shift;
my @tagslist;
open my $fd, '-|', git_cmd(), 'for-each-ref',
($limit ? '--count='.($limit+1) : ()), '--sort=-creatordate',
'--format=%(objectname) %(objecttype) %(refname) '.
'%(*objectname) %(*objecttype) %(subject)%00%(creator)',
'refs/tags'
or return;
while (my $line = <$fd>) {
my %ref_item;
gitweb: Use git-for-each-ref to generate list of heads and/or tags Add two subroutines: git_get_heads_list and git_get_refs_list, which fill out needed parts of refs info (heads and tags respectively) info using single call to git-for-each-ref, instead of using git-peek-remote to get list of references and using parse_ref for each ref to get ref info, which in turn uses at least one call of git command. Replace call to git_get_refs_list in git_summary by call to git_get_references, git_get_heads_list and git_get_tags_list (simplifying this subroutine a bit). Use git_get_heads_list in git_heads and git_get_tags_list in git_tags. Modify git_tags_body slightly to accept output from git_get_tags_list. Remove no longer used, and a bit hackish, git_get_refs_list. parse_ref is no longer used, but is left for now. Generating "summary" and "tags" views should be much faster for projects which have large number of tags. CHANGES IN OUTPUT: Before, if ref in refs/tags was tag pointing to commit we used committer epoch as epoch for ref, and used tagger epoch as epoch only for tag pointing to object of other type. If ref in refs/tags was commit, we used committer epoch as epoch for ref (see parse_ref; we sorted in gitweb by 'epoch' field). Currently we use committer epoch for refs pointing to commit objects, and tagger epoch for refs pointing to tag object, even if tag points to commit. Simple ab benchmark before and after this patch for my git.git repository (git/jnareb-git.git) with some heads and tags added as compared to git.git repository, shows around 2.4-3.0 times speedup for "summary" and "tags" views: summary 3134 +/- 24.2 ms --> 1081 +/- 30.2 ms tags 2886 +/- 18.9 ms --> 1196 +/- 15.6 ms Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
chomp $line;
my ($refinfo, $creatorinfo) = split(/\0/, $line);
my ($id, $type, $name, $refid, $reftype, $title) = split(' ', $refinfo, 6);
my ($creator, $epoch, $tz) =
($creatorinfo =~ /^(.*) ([0-9]+) (.*)$/);
$ref_item{'fullname'} = $name;
gitweb: Use git-for-each-ref to generate list of heads and/or tags Add two subroutines: git_get_heads_list and git_get_refs_list, which fill out needed parts of refs info (heads and tags respectively) info using single call to git-for-each-ref, instead of using git-peek-remote to get list of references and using parse_ref for each ref to get ref info, which in turn uses at least one call of git command. Replace call to git_get_refs_list in git_summary by call to git_get_references, git_get_heads_list and git_get_tags_list (simplifying this subroutine a bit). Use git_get_heads_list in git_heads and git_get_tags_list in git_tags. Modify git_tags_body slightly to accept output from git_get_tags_list. Remove no longer used, and a bit hackish, git_get_refs_list. parse_ref is no longer used, but is left for now. Generating "summary" and "tags" views should be much faster for projects which have large number of tags. CHANGES IN OUTPUT: Before, if ref in refs/tags was tag pointing to commit we used committer epoch as epoch for ref, and used tagger epoch as epoch only for tag pointing to object of other type. If ref in refs/tags was commit, we used committer epoch as epoch for ref (see parse_ref; we sorted in gitweb by 'epoch' field). Currently we use committer epoch for refs pointing to commit objects, and tagger epoch for refs pointing to tag object, even if tag points to commit. Simple ab benchmark before and after this patch for my git.git repository (git/jnareb-git.git) with some heads and tags added as compared to git.git repository, shows around 2.4-3.0 times speedup for "summary" and "tags" views: summary 3134 +/- 24.2 ms --> 1081 +/- 30.2 ms tags 2886 +/- 18.9 ms --> 1196 +/- 15.6 ms Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
$name =~ s!^refs/tags/!!;
$ref_item{'type'} = $type;
$ref_item{'id'} = $id;
$ref_item{'name'} = $name;
if ($type eq "tag") {
$ref_item{'subject'} = $title;
$ref_item{'reftype'} = $reftype;
$ref_item{'refid'} = $refid;
} else {
$ref_item{'reftype'} = $type;
$ref_item{'refid'} = $id;
}
if ($type eq "tag" || $type eq "commit") {
$ref_item{'epoch'} = $epoch;
if ($epoch) {
$ref_item{'age'} = age_string(time - $ref_item{'epoch'});
} else {
$ref_item{'age'} = "unknown";
}
}
20 years ago
gitweb: Use git-for-each-ref to generate list of heads and/or tags Add two subroutines: git_get_heads_list and git_get_refs_list, which fill out needed parts of refs info (heads and tags respectively) info using single call to git-for-each-ref, instead of using git-peek-remote to get list of references and using parse_ref for each ref to get ref info, which in turn uses at least one call of git command. Replace call to git_get_refs_list in git_summary by call to git_get_references, git_get_heads_list and git_get_tags_list (simplifying this subroutine a bit). Use git_get_heads_list in git_heads and git_get_tags_list in git_tags. Modify git_tags_body slightly to accept output from git_get_tags_list. Remove no longer used, and a bit hackish, git_get_refs_list. parse_ref is no longer used, but is left for now. Generating "summary" and "tags" views should be much faster for projects which have large number of tags. CHANGES IN OUTPUT: Before, if ref in refs/tags was tag pointing to commit we used committer epoch as epoch for ref, and used tagger epoch as epoch only for tag pointing to object of other type. If ref in refs/tags was commit, we used committer epoch as epoch for ref (see parse_ref; we sorted in gitweb by 'epoch' field). Currently we use committer epoch for refs pointing to commit objects, and tagger epoch for refs pointing to tag object, even if tag points to commit. Simple ab benchmark before and after this patch for my git.git repository (git/jnareb-git.git) with some heads and tags added as compared to git.git repository, shows around 2.4-3.0 times speedup for "summary" and "tags" views: summary 3134 +/- 24.2 ms --> 1081 +/- 30.2 ms tags 2886 +/- 18.9 ms --> 1196 +/- 15.6 ms Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
push @tagslist, \%ref_item;
}
gitweb: Use git-for-each-ref to generate list of heads and/or tags Add two subroutines: git_get_heads_list and git_get_refs_list, which fill out needed parts of refs info (heads and tags respectively) info using single call to git-for-each-ref, instead of using git-peek-remote to get list of references and using parse_ref for each ref to get ref info, which in turn uses at least one call of git command. Replace call to git_get_refs_list in git_summary by call to git_get_references, git_get_heads_list and git_get_tags_list (simplifying this subroutine a bit). Use git_get_heads_list in git_heads and git_get_tags_list in git_tags. Modify git_tags_body slightly to accept output from git_get_tags_list. Remove no longer used, and a bit hackish, git_get_refs_list. parse_ref is no longer used, but is left for now. Generating "summary" and "tags" views should be much faster for projects which have large number of tags. CHANGES IN OUTPUT: Before, if ref in refs/tags was tag pointing to commit we used committer epoch as epoch for ref, and used tagger epoch as epoch only for tag pointing to object of other type. If ref in refs/tags was commit, we used committer epoch as epoch for ref (see parse_ref; we sorted in gitweb by 'epoch' field). Currently we use committer epoch for refs pointing to commit objects, and tagger epoch for refs pointing to tag object, even if tag points to commit. Simple ab benchmark before and after this patch for my git.git repository (git/jnareb-git.git) with some heads and tags added as compared to git.git repository, shows around 2.4-3.0 times speedup for "summary" and "tags" views: summary 3134 +/- 24.2 ms --> 1081 +/- 30.2 ms tags 2886 +/- 18.9 ms --> 1196 +/- 15.6 ms Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
close $fd;
return wantarray ? @tagslist : \@tagslist;
20 years ago
}
## ----------------------------------------------------------------------
## filesystem-related functions
20 years ago
20 years ago
sub get_file_owner {
my $path = shift;
my ($dev, $ino, $mode, $nlink, $st_uid, $st_gid, $rdev, $size) = stat($path);
my ($name, $passwd, $uid, $gid, $quota, $comment, $gcos, $dir, $shell) = getpwuid($st_uid);
if (!defined $gcos) {
return undef;
}
my $owner = $gcos;
$owner =~ s/[,;].*$//;
return to_utf8($owner);
20 years ago
}
# assume that file exists
sub insert_file {
my $filename = shift;
open my $fd, '<', $filename;
print map { to_utf8($_) } <$fd>;
close $fd;
}
## ......................................................................
## mimetype related functions
20 years ago
sub mimetype_guess_file {
my $filename = shift;
my $mimemap = shift;
-r $mimemap or return undef;
my %mimemap;
open(MIME, $mimemap) or return undef;
while (<MIME>) {
next if m/^#/; # skip comments
my ($mime, $exts) = split(/\t+/);
if (defined $exts) {
my @exts = split(/\s+/, $exts);
foreach my $ext (@exts) {
$mimemap{$ext} = $mime;
}
20 years ago
}
}
close(MIME);
20 years ago
$filename =~ /\.([^.]*)$/;
return $mimemap{$1};
}
sub mimetype_guess {
my $filename = shift;
my $mime;
$filename =~ /\./ or return undef;
if ($mimetypes_file) {
my $file = $mimetypes_file;
if ($file !~ m!^/!) { # if it is relative path
# it is relative to project
$file = "$projectroot/$project/$file";
}
$mime = mimetype_guess_file($filename, $file);
}
$mime ||= mimetype_guess_file($filename, '/etc/mime.types');
return $mime;
}
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
sub blob_mimetype {
my $fd = shift;
my $filename = shift;
if ($filename) {
my $mime = mimetype_guess($filename);
$mime and return $mime;
}
# just in case
return $default_blob_plain_mimetype unless $fd;
if (-T $fd) {
return 'text/plain';
} elsif (! $filename) {
return 'application/octet-stream';
} elsif ($filename =~ m/\.png$/i) {
return 'image/png';
} elsif ($filename =~ m/\.gif$/i) {
return 'image/gif';
} elsif ($filename =~ m/\.jpe?g$/i) {
return 'image/jpeg';
} else {
return 'application/octet-stream';
}
}
sub blob_contenttype {
my ($fd, $file_name, $type) = @_;
$type ||= blob_mimetype($fd, $file_name);
if ($type eq 'text/plain' && defined $default_text_plain_charset) {
$type .= "; charset=$default_text_plain_charset";
}
return $type;
}
## ======================================================================
## functions printing HTML: header, footer, error page
sub git_header_html {
my $status = shift || "200 OK";
my $expires = shift;
my $title = "$site_name";
if (defined $project) {
$title .= " - " . to_utf8($project);
if (defined $action) {
$title .= "/$action";
if (defined $file_name) {
$title .= " - " . esc_path($file_name);
if ($action eq "tree" && $file_name !~ m|/$|) {
$title .= "/";
}
}
}
}
my $content_type;
# require explicit support from the UA if we are to send the page as
# 'application/xhtml+xml', otherwise send it as plain old 'text/html'.
# we have to do this because MSIE sometimes globs '*/*', pretending to
# support xhtml+xml but choking when it gets what it asked for.
if (defined $cgi->http('HTTP_ACCEPT') &&
$cgi->http('HTTP_ACCEPT') =~ m/(,|;|\s|^)application\/xhtml\+xml(,|;|\s|$)/ &&
$cgi->Accept('application/xhtml+xml') != 0) {
$content_type = 'application/xhtml+xml';
} else {
$content_type = 'text/html';
}
print $cgi->header(-type=>$content_type, -charset => 'utf-8',
-status=> $status, -expires => $expires);
my $mod_perl_version = $ENV{'MOD_PERL'} ? " $ENV{'MOD_PERL'}" : '';
print <<EOF;
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en-US" lang="en-US">
<!-- git web interface version $version, (C) 2005-2006, Kay Sievers <kay.sievers\@vrfy.org>, Christian Gierke -->
<!-- git core binaries version $git_version -->
<head>
<meta http-equiv="content-type" content="$content_type; charset=utf-8"/>
<meta name="generator" content="gitweb/$version git/$git_version$mod_perl_version"/>
<meta name="robots" content="index, nofollow"/>
<title>$title</title>
EOF
# print out each stylesheet that exist
if (defined $stylesheet) {
#provides backwards capability for those people who define style sheet in a config file
print '<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="'.$stylesheet.'"/>'."\n";
} else {
foreach my $stylesheet (@stylesheets) {
next unless $stylesheet;
print '<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="'.$stylesheet.'"/>'."\n";
}
}
if (defined $project) {
gitweb: Use feed link according to current view Michael G. Noll said in comments to the "Switching my code repository from Subversion (SVN) to git" article (http://tinyurl.com/37v67l) in his "My digital moleskine" blog, that one of the things he is missing in gitweb from SVN::Web is an RSS feed with news/information of the current view (including RSS feed for single file or directory). This is not exactly true, as since refactoring feed generation in af6feeb (gitweb: Refactor feed generation, make output prettier, add Atom feed, 2006-11-19), gitweb can generate feeds (RSS or Atom) for history of a given branch, history limited to a given directory, or history of a given file. Nevertheless this required handcrafting the URL to get wanted RSS feed. This commit makes gitweb select feed links in the HTML header and in page footer depending on current view (action). It is more elaborate, and I guess more correct, than simple patch adding $hash ('h') parameter to *all* URLs, including feed links, by Jean-Baptiste Quenot Subject: [PATCH] gitweb: Add hash parameter in feed URL when a hash is specified in the current request Message-ID: <ae63f8b50803211138y6355fd11pa64cda50a1f53011@mail.gmail.com> If $hash ('h') or $hash_base ('hb') parameter is a branch name (i.e. it starts with 'refs/heads/'; all generated URLs use this form to discriminate between tags and heads), it is used in feed URLs; if $file_name ('f') is defined, it is used in feed URLs. Feed title is set according to the kind of web feed: it is either 'log' for generic feed, 'log of <branch>', 'history of <filename>' for generic history (using implicit or explicit HEAD, i.e. current branch) or 'history of <filename> on <branch>'. There are special cases: 'heads' and 'forks' views should use OPML providing list of available feeds; 'tags' probably also should use OPML; there is no web feed equivalent to 'search' view. Currently all those cases fallback to (show) default feed. Such feed link uses "generic" class, and is shown in slightly lighter color for distinction. Currently feed can have but one starting point, and does not support negative (exclude) commit arguments. Therefore for now for *diff views it is chosen that feed follow the "to" part: to-name, to-commit for 'blobdiff', 'treediff' and 'commitdiff' views. Generating parameters for href() for feed link was separated (refactored) into get_feed_info() subroutine. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
17 years ago
my %href_params = get_feed_info();
if (!exists $href_params{'-title'}) {
$href_params{'-title'} = 'log';
}
foreach my $format qw(RSS Atom) {
my $type = lc($format);
my %link_attr = (
'-rel' => 'alternate',
'-title' => "$project - $href_params{'-title'} - $format feed",
'-type' => "application/$type+xml"
);
$href_params{'action'} = $type;
$link_attr{'-href'} = href(%href_params);
print "<link ".
"rel=\"$link_attr{'-rel'}\" ".
"title=\"$link_attr{'-title'}\" ".
"href=\"$link_attr{'-href'}\" ".
"type=\"$link_attr{'-type'}\" ".
"/>\n";
$href_params{'extra_options'} = '--no-merges';
$link_attr{'-href'} = href(%href_params);
$link_attr{'-title'} .= ' (no merges)';
print "<link ".
"rel=\"$link_attr{'-rel'}\" ".
"title=\"$link_attr{'-title'}\" ".
"href=\"$link_attr{'-href'}\" ".
"type=\"$link_attr{'-type'}\" ".
"/>\n";
}
} else {
printf('<link rel="alternate" title="%s projects list" '.
gitweb: Use feed link according to current view Michael G. Noll said in comments to the "Switching my code repository from Subversion (SVN) to git" article (http://tinyurl.com/37v67l) in his "My digital moleskine" blog, that one of the things he is missing in gitweb from SVN::Web is an RSS feed with news/information of the current view (including RSS feed for single file or directory). This is not exactly true, as since refactoring feed generation in af6feeb (gitweb: Refactor feed generation, make output prettier, add Atom feed, 2006-11-19), gitweb can generate feeds (RSS or Atom) for history of a given branch, history limited to a given directory, or history of a given file. Nevertheless this required handcrafting the URL to get wanted RSS feed. This commit makes gitweb select feed links in the HTML header and in page footer depending on current view (action). It is more elaborate, and I guess more correct, than simple patch adding $hash ('h') parameter to *all* URLs, including feed links, by Jean-Baptiste Quenot Subject: [PATCH] gitweb: Add hash parameter in feed URL when a hash is specified in the current request Message-ID: <ae63f8b50803211138y6355fd11pa64cda50a1f53011@mail.gmail.com> If $hash ('h') or $hash_base ('hb') parameter is a branch name (i.e. it starts with 'refs/heads/'; all generated URLs use this form to discriminate between tags and heads), it is used in feed URLs; if $file_name ('f') is defined, it is used in feed URLs. Feed title is set according to the kind of web feed: it is either 'log' for generic feed, 'log of <branch>', 'history of <filename>' for generic history (using implicit or explicit HEAD, i.e. current branch) or 'history of <filename> on <branch>'. There are special cases: 'heads' and 'forks' views should use OPML providing list of available feeds; 'tags' probably also should use OPML; there is no web feed equivalent to 'search' view. Currently all those cases fallback to (show) default feed. Such feed link uses "generic" class, and is shown in slightly lighter color for distinction. Currently feed can have but one starting point, and does not support negative (exclude) commit arguments. Therefore for now for *diff views it is chosen that feed follow the "to" part: to-name, to-commit for 'blobdiff', 'treediff' and 'commitdiff' views. Generating parameters for href() for feed link was separated (refactored) into get_feed_info() subroutine. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
17 years ago
'href="%s" type="text/plain; charset=utf-8" />'."\n",
$site_name, href(project=>undef, action=>"project_index"));
gitweb: Refactor feed generation, make output prettier, add Atom feed Add support for more modern Atom web feed format. Both RSS and Atom feeds are generated by git_feed subroutine to avoid code duplication; git_rss and git_atom are thin wrappers around git_feed. Add links to Atom feed in HTML header and in page footer (but not in OPML; we should use APP, Atom Publishing Proptocol instead). Allow for feed generation for branches other than current (HEAD) branch, and for generation of feeds for file or directory history. Do not use "pre ${\sub_returning_scalar(...)} post" trick, but join strings instead: "pre " . sub_returning_scalar(...) . " post". Use href(-full=>1, ...) instead of hand-crafting gitweb urls. Make output prettier: * Use title similar to the title of web page * Use project description (if exists) for description/subtitle * Do not add anything (committer name, commit date) to feed entry title * Wrap the commit message in <pre> * Make file names into an unordered list * Add links (diff, conditional blame, history) to the file list. In addition to the above points, the attached patch emits a Last-Changed: HTTP response header field, and doesn't compute the feed body if the HTTP request type was HEAD. This helps keep the web server load down for well-behaved feed readers that check if the feed needs updating. If browser (feed reader) sent Accept: header, and it prefers 'text/xml' type to 'application/rss+xml' (in the case of RSS feed) or 'application/atom+xml' (in the case of Atom feed), then use 'text/xml' as content type. Both RSS and Atom feeds validate at http://feedvalidator.org and at http://validator.w3.org/feed/ Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Andreas Fuchs <asf@boinkor.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
printf('<link rel="alternate" title="%s projects feeds" '.
gitweb: Use feed link according to current view Michael G. Noll said in comments to the "Switching my code repository from Subversion (SVN) to git" article (http://tinyurl.com/37v67l) in his "My digital moleskine" blog, that one of the things he is missing in gitweb from SVN::Web is an RSS feed with news/information of the current view (including RSS feed for single file or directory). This is not exactly true, as since refactoring feed generation in af6feeb (gitweb: Refactor feed generation, make output prettier, add Atom feed, 2006-11-19), gitweb can generate feeds (RSS or Atom) for history of a given branch, history limited to a given directory, or history of a given file. Nevertheless this required handcrafting the URL to get wanted RSS feed. This commit makes gitweb select feed links in the HTML header and in page footer depending on current view (action). It is more elaborate, and I guess more correct, than simple patch adding $hash ('h') parameter to *all* URLs, including feed links, by Jean-Baptiste Quenot Subject: [PATCH] gitweb: Add hash parameter in feed URL when a hash is specified in the current request Message-ID: <ae63f8b50803211138y6355fd11pa64cda50a1f53011@mail.gmail.com> If $hash ('h') or $hash_base ('hb') parameter is a branch name (i.e. it starts with 'refs/heads/'; all generated URLs use this form to discriminate between tags and heads), it is used in feed URLs; if $file_name ('f') is defined, it is used in feed URLs. Feed title is set according to the kind of web feed: it is either 'log' for generic feed, 'log of <branch>', 'history of <filename>' for generic history (using implicit or explicit HEAD, i.e. current branch) or 'history of <filename> on <branch>'. There are special cases: 'heads' and 'forks' views should use OPML providing list of available feeds; 'tags' probably also should use OPML; there is no web feed equivalent to 'search' view. Currently all those cases fallback to (show) default feed. Such feed link uses "generic" class, and is shown in slightly lighter color for distinction. Currently feed can have but one starting point, and does not support negative (exclude) commit arguments. Therefore for now for *diff views it is chosen that feed follow the "to" part: to-name, to-commit for 'blobdiff', 'treediff' and 'commitdiff' views. Generating parameters for href() for feed link was separated (refactored) into get_feed_info() subroutine. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
17 years ago
'href="%s" type="text/x-opml" />'."\n",
$site_name, href(project=>undef, action=>"opml"));
}
if (defined $favicon) {
gitweb: Use feed link according to current view Michael G. Noll said in comments to the "Switching my code repository from Subversion (SVN) to git" article (http://tinyurl.com/37v67l) in his "My digital moleskine" blog, that one of the things he is missing in gitweb from SVN::Web is an RSS feed with news/information of the current view (including RSS feed for single file or directory). This is not exactly true, as since refactoring feed generation in af6feeb (gitweb: Refactor feed generation, make output prettier, add Atom feed, 2006-11-19), gitweb can generate feeds (RSS or Atom) for history of a given branch, history limited to a given directory, or history of a given file. Nevertheless this required handcrafting the URL to get wanted RSS feed. This commit makes gitweb select feed links in the HTML header and in page footer depending on current view (action). It is more elaborate, and I guess more correct, than simple patch adding $hash ('h') parameter to *all* URLs, including feed links, by Jean-Baptiste Quenot Subject: [PATCH] gitweb: Add hash parameter in feed URL when a hash is specified in the current request Message-ID: <ae63f8b50803211138y6355fd11pa64cda50a1f53011@mail.gmail.com> If $hash ('h') or $hash_base ('hb') parameter is a branch name (i.e. it starts with 'refs/heads/'; all generated URLs use this form to discriminate between tags and heads), it is used in feed URLs; if $file_name ('f') is defined, it is used in feed URLs. Feed title is set according to the kind of web feed: it is either 'log' for generic feed, 'log of <branch>', 'history of <filename>' for generic history (using implicit or explicit HEAD, i.e. current branch) or 'history of <filename> on <branch>'. There are special cases: 'heads' and 'forks' views should use OPML providing list of available feeds; 'tags' probably also should use OPML; there is no web feed equivalent to 'search' view. Currently all those cases fallback to (show) default feed. Such feed link uses "generic" class, and is shown in slightly lighter color for distinction. Currently feed can have but one starting point, and does not support negative (exclude) commit arguments. Therefore for now for *diff views it is chosen that feed follow the "to" part: to-name, to-commit for 'blobdiff', 'treediff' and 'commitdiff' views. Generating parameters for href() for feed link was separated (refactored) into get_feed_info() subroutine. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
17 years ago
print qq(<link rel="shortcut icon" href="$favicon" type="image/png" />\n);
}
print "</head>\n" .
"<body>\n";
if (-f $site_header) {
insert_file($site_header);
}
print "<div class=\"page_header\">\n" .
$cgi->a({-href => esc_url($logo_url),
-title => $logo_label},
qq(<img src="$logo" width="72" height="27" alt="git" class="logo"/>));
print $cgi->a({-href => esc_url($home_link)}, $home_link_str) . " / ";
if (defined $project) {
print $cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"summary")}, esc_html($project));
if (defined $action) {
print " / $action";
}
print "\n";
}
print "</div>\n";
my $have_search = gitweb_check_feature('search');
if (defined $project && $have_search) {
if (!defined $searchtext) {
$searchtext = "";
}
my $search_hash;
if (defined $hash_base) {
$search_hash = $hash_base;
} elsif (defined $hash) {
$search_hash = $hash;
20 years ago
} else {
$search_hash = "HEAD";
20 years ago
}
my $action = $my_uri;
my $use_pathinfo = gitweb_check_feature('pathinfo');
if ($use_pathinfo) {
$action .= "/".esc_url($project);
}
print $cgi->startform(-method => "get", -action => $action) .
"<div class=\"search\">\n" .
(!$use_pathinfo &&
$cgi->input({-name=>"p", -value=>$project, -type=>"hidden"}) . "\n") .
$cgi->input({-name=>"a", -value=>"search", -type=>"hidden"}) . "\n" .
$cgi->input({-name=>"h", -value=>$search_hash, -type=>"hidden"}) . "\n" .
$cgi->popup_menu(-name => 'st', -default => 'commit',
-values => ['commit', 'grep', 'author', 'committer', 'pickaxe']) .
$cgi->sup($cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"search_help")}, "?")) .
" search:\n",
$cgi->textfield(-name => "s", -value => $searchtext) . "\n" .
"<span title=\"Extended regular expression\">" .
$cgi->checkbox(-name => 'sr', -value => 1, -label => 're',
-checked => $search_use_regexp) .
"</span>" .
"</div>" .
$cgi->end_form() . "\n";
20 years ago
}
}
sub git_footer_html {
gitweb: Use feed link according to current view Michael G. Noll said in comments to the "Switching my code repository from Subversion (SVN) to git" article (http://tinyurl.com/37v67l) in his "My digital moleskine" blog, that one of the things he is missing in gitweb from SVN::Web is an RSS feed with news/information of the current view (including RSS feed for single file or directory). This is not exactly true, as since refactoring feed generation in af6feeb (gitweb: Refactor feed generation, make output prettier, add Atom feed, 2006-11-19), gitweb can generate feeds (RSS or Atom) for history of a given branch, history limited to a given directory, or history of a given file. Nevertheless this required handcrafting the URL to get wanted RSS feed. This commit makes gitweb select feed links in the HTML header and in page footer depending on current view (action). It is more elaborate, and I guess more correct, than simple patch adding $hash ('h') parameter to *all* URLs, including feed links, by Jean-Baptiste Quenot Subject: [PATCH] gitweb: Add hash parameter in feed URL when a hash is specified in the current request Message-ID: <ae63f8b50803211138y6355fd11pa64cda50a1f53011@mail.gmail.com> If $hash ('h') or $hash_base ('hb') parameter is a branch name (i.e. it starts with 'refs/heads/'; all generated URLs use this form to discriminate between tags and heads), it is used in feed URLs; if $file_name ('f') is defined, it is used in feed URLs. Feed title is set according to the kind of web feed: it is either 'log' for generic feed, 'log of <branch>', 'history of <filename>' for generic history (using implicit or explicit HEAD, i.e. current branch) or 'history of <filename> on <branch>'. There are special cases: 'heads' and 'forks' views should use OPML providing list of available feeds; 'tags' probably also should use OPML; there is no web feed equivalent to 'search' view. Currently all those cases fallback to (show) default feed. Such feed link uses "generic" class, and is shown in slightly lighter color for distinction. Currently feed can have but one starting point, and does not support negative (exclude) commit arguments. Therefore for now for *diff views it is chosen that feed follow the "to" part: to-name, to-commit for 'blobdiff', 'treediff' and 'commitdiff' views. Generating parameters for href() for feed link was separated (refactored) into get_feed_info() subroutine. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
17 years ago
my $feed_class = 'rss_logo';
print "<div class=\"page_footer\">\n";
if (defined $project) {
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
my $descr = git_get_project_description($project);
if (defined $descr) {
print "<div class=\"page_footer_text\">" . esc_html($descr) . "</div>\n";
}
gitweb: Use feed link according to current view Michael G. Noll said in comments to the "Switching my code repository from Subversion (SVN) to git" article (http://tinyurl.com/37v67l) in his "My digital moleskine" blog, that one of the things he is missing in gitweb from SVN::Web is an RSS feed with news/information of the current view (including RSS feed for single file or directory). This is not exactly true, as since refactoring feed generation in af6feeb (gitweb: Refactor feed generation, make output prettier, add Atom feed, 2006-11-19), gitweb can generate feeds (RSS or Atom) for history of a given branch, history limited to a given directory, or history of a given file. Nevertheless this required handcrafting the URL to get wanted RSS feed. This commit makes gitweb select feed links in the HTML header and in page footer depending on current view (action). It is more elaborate, and I guess more correct, than simple patch adding $hash ('h') parameter to *all* URLs, including feed links, by Jean-Baptiste Quenot Subject: [PATCH] gitweb: Add hash parameter in feed URL when a hash is specified in the current request Message-ID: <ae63f8b50803211138y6355fd11pa64cda50a1f53011@mail.gmail.com> If $hash ('h') or $hash_base ('hb') parameter is a branch name (i.e. it starts with 'refs/heads/'; all generated URLs use this form to discriminate between tags and heads), it is used in feed URLs; if $file_name ('f') is defined, it is used in feed URLs. Feed title is set according to the kind of web feed: it is either 'log' for generic feed, 'log of <branch>', 'history of <filename>' for generic history (using implicit or explicit HEAD, i.e. current branch) or 'history of <filename> on <branch>'. There are special cases: 'heads' and 'forks' views should use OPML providing list of available feeds; 'tags' probably also should use OPML; there is no web feed equivalent to 'search' view. Currently all those cases fallback to (show) default feed. Such feed link uses "generic" class, and is shown in slightly lighter color for distinction. Currently feed can have but one starting point, and does not support negative (exclude) commit arguments. Therefore for now for *diff views it is chosen that feed follow the "to" part: to-name, to-commit for 'blobdiff', 'treediff' and 'commitdiff' views. Generating parameters for href() for feed link was separated (refactored) into get_feed_info() subroutine. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
17 years ago
my %href_params = get_feed_info();
if (!%href_params) {
$feed_class .= ' generic';
}
$href_params{'-title'} ||= 'log';
foreach my $format qw(RSS Atom) {
$href_params{'action'} = lc($format);
print $cgi->a({-href => href(%href_params),
-title => "$href_params{'-title'} $format feed",
-class => $feed_class}, $format)."\n";
}
} else {
print $cgi->a({-href => href(project=>undef, action=>"opml"),
gitweb: Use feed link according to current view Michael G. Noll said in comments to the "Switching my code repository from Subversion (SVN) to git" article (http://tinyurl.com/37v67l) in his "My digital moleskine" blog, that one of the things he is missing in gitweb from SVN::Web is an RSS feed with news/information of the current view (including RSS feed for single file or directory). This is not exactly true, as since refactoring feed generation in af6feeb (gitweb: Refactor feed generation, make output prettier, add Atom feed, 2006-11-19), gitweb can generate feeds (RSS or Atom) for history of a given branch, history limited to a given directory, or history of a given file. Nevertheless this required handcrafting the URL to get wanted RSS feed. This commit makes gitweb select feed links in the HTML header and in page footer depending on current view (action). It is more elaborate, and I guess more correct, than simple patch adding $hash ('h') parameter to *all* URLs, including feed links, by Jean-Baptiste Quenot Subject: [PATCH] gitweb: Add hash parameter in feed URL when a hash is specified in the current request Message-ID: <ae63f8b50803211138y6355fd11pa64cda50a1f53011@mail.gmail.com> If $hash ('h') or $hash_base ('hb') parameter is a branch name (i.e. it starts with 'refs/heads/'; all generated URLs use this form to discriminate between tags and heads), it is used in feed URLs; if $file_name ('f') is defined, it is used in feed URLs. Feed title is set according to the kind of web feed: it is either 'log' for generic feed, 'log of <branch>', 'history of <filename>' for generic history (using implicit or explicit HEAD, i.e. current branch) or 'history of <filename> on <branch>'. There are special cases: 'heads' and 'forks' views should use OPML providing list of available feeds; 'tags' probably also should use OPML; there is no web feed equivalent to 'search' view. Currently all those cases fallback to (show) default feed. Such feed link uses "generic" class, and is shown in slightly lighter color for distinction. Currently feed can have but one starting point, and does not support negative (exclude) commit arguments. Therefore for now for *diff views it is chosen that feed follow the "to" part: to-name, to-commit for 'blobdiff', 'treediff' and 'commitdiff' views. Generating parameters for href() for feed link was separated (refactored) into get_feed_info() subroutine. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
17 years ago
-class => $feed_class}, "OPML") . " ";
print $cgi->a({-href => href(project=>undef, action=>"project_index"),
gitweb: Use feed link according to current view Michael G. Noll said in comments to the "Switching my code repository from Subversion (SVN) to git" article (http://tinyurl.com/37v67l) in his "My digital moleskine" blog, that one of the things he is missing in gitweb from SVN::Web is an RSS feed with news/information of the current view (including RSS feed for single file or directory). This is not exactly true, as since refactoring feed generation in af6feeb (gitweb: Refactor feed generation, make output prettier, add Atom feed, 2006-11-19), gitweb can generate feeds (RSS or Atom) for history of a given branch, history limited to a given directory, or history of a given file. Nevertheless this required handcrafting the URL to get wanted RSS feed. This commit makes gitweb select feed links in the HTML header and in page footer depending on current view (action). It is more elaborate, and I guess more correct, than simple patch adding $hash ('h') parameter to *all* URLs, including feed links, by Jean-Baptiste Quenot Subject: [PATCH] gitweb: Add hash parameter in feed URL when a hash is specified in the current request Message-ID: <ae63f8b50803211138y6355fd11pa64cda50a1f53011@mail.gmail.com> If $hash ('h') or $hash_base ('hb') parameter is a branch name (i.e. it starts with 'refs/heads/'; all generated URLs use this form to discriminate between tags and heads), it is used in feed URLs; if $file_name ('f') is defined, it is used in feed URLs. Feed title is set according to the kind of web feed: it is either 'log' for generic feed, 'log of <branch>', 'history of <filename>' for generic history (using implicit or explicit HEAD, i.e. current branch) or 'history of <filename> on <branch>'. There are special cases: 'heads' and 'forks' views should use OPML providing list of available feeds; 'tags' probably also should use OPML; there is no web feed equivalent to 'search' view. Currently all those cases fallback to (show) default feed. Such feed link uses "generic" class, and is shown in slightly lighter color for distinction. Currently feed can have but one starting point, and does not support negative (exclude) commit arguments. Therefore for now for *diff views it is chosen that feed follow the "to" part: to-name, to-commit for 'blobdiff', 'treediff' and 'commitdiff' views. Generating parameters for href() for feed link was separated (refactored) into get_feed_info() subroutine. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
17 years ago
-class => $feed_class}, "TXT") . "\n";
}
gitweb: Use feed link according to current view Michael G. Noll said in comments to the "Switching my code repository from Subversion (SVN) to git" article (http://tinyurl.com/37v67l) in his "My digital moleskine" blog, that one of the things he is missing in gitweb from SVN::Web is an RSS feed with news/information of the current view (including RSS feed for single file or directory). This is not exactly true, as since refactoring feed generation in af6feeb (gitweb: Refactor feed generation, make output prettier, add Atom feed, 2006-11-19), gitweb can generate feeds (RSS or Atom) for history of a given branch, history limited to a given directory, or history of a given file. Nevertheless this required handcrafting the URL to get wanted RSS feed. This commit makes gitweb select feed links in the HTML header and in page footer depending on current view (action). It is more elaborate, and I guess more correct, than simple patch adding $hash ('h') parameter to *all* URLs, including feed links, by Jean-Baptiste Quenot Subject: [PATCH] gitweb: Add hash parameter in feed URL when a hash is specified in the current request Message-ID: <ae63f8b50803211138y6355fd11pa64cda50a1f53011@mail.gmail.com> If $hash ('h') or $hash_base ('hb') parameter is a branch name (i.e. it starts with 'refs/heads/'; all generated URLs use this form to discriminate between tags and heads), it is used in feed URLs; if $file_name ('f') is defined, it is used in feed URLs. Feed title is set according to the kind of web feed: it is either 'log' for generic feed, 'log of <branch>', 'history of <filename>' for generic history (using implicit or explicit HEAD, i.e. current branch) or 'history of <filename> on <branch>'. There are special cases: 'heads' and 'forks' views should use OPML providing list of available feeds; 'tags' probably also should use OPML; there is no web feed equivalent to 'search' view. Currently all those cases fallback to (show) default feed. Such feed link uses "generic" class, and is shown in slightly lighter color for distinction. Currently feed can have but one starting point, and does not support negative (exclude) commit arguments. Therefore for now for *diff views it is chosen that feed follow the "to" part: to-name, to-commit for 'blobdiff', 'treediff' and 'commitdiff' views. Generating parameters for href() for feed link was separated (refactored) into get_feed_info() subroutine. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
17 years ago
print "</div>\n"; # class="page_footer"
if (-f $site_footer) {
insert_file($site_footer);
}
print "</body>\n" .
"</html>";
}
# die_error(<http_status_code>, <error_message>)
# Example: die_error(404, 'Hash not found')
# By convention, use the following status codes (as defined in RFC 2616):
# 400: Invalid or missing CGI parameters, or
# requested object exists but has wrong type.
# 403: Requested feature (like "pickaxe" or "snapshot") not enabled on
# this server or project.
# 404: Requested object/revision/project doesn't exist.
# 500: The server isn't configured properly, or
# an internal error occurred (e.g. failed assertions caused by bugs), or
# an unknown error occurred (e.g. the git binary died unexpectedly).
sub die_error {
my $status = shift || 500;
my $error = shift || "Internal server error";
my %http_responses = (400 => '400 Bad Request',
403 => '403 Forbidden',
404 => '404 Not Found',
500 => '500 Internal Server Error');
git_header_html($http_responses{$status});
print <<EOF;
<div class="page_body">
<br /><br />
$status - $error
<br />
</div>
EOF
20 years ago
git_footer_html();
exit;
}
## ----------------------------------------------------------------------
## functions printing or outputting HTML: navigation
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
sub git_print_page_nav {
my ($current, $suppress, $head, $treehead, $treebase, $extra) = @_;
$extra = '' if !defined $extra; # pager or formats
my @navs = qw(summary shortlog log commit commitdiff tree);
if ($suppress) {
@navs = grep { $_ ne $suppress } @navs;
}
my %arg = map { $_ => {action=>$_} } @navs;
if (defined $head) {
for (qw(commit commitdiff)) {
$arg{$_}{'hash'} = $head;
}
if ($current =~ m/^(tree | log | shortlog | commit | commitdiff | search)$/x) {
for (qw(shortlog log)) {
$arg{$_}{'hash'} = $head;
}
}
}
$arg{'tree'}{'hash'} = $treehead if defined $treehead;
$arg{'tree'}{'hash_base'} = $treebase if defined $treebase;
my @actions = gitweb_get_feature('actions');
my %repl = (
'%' => '%',
'n' => $project, # project name
'f' => $git_dir, # project path within filesystem
'h' => $treehead || '', # current hash ('h' parameter)
'b' => $treebase || '', # hash base ('hb' parameter)
);
while (@actions) {
my ($label, $link, $pos) = splice(@actions,0,3);
# insert
@navs = map { $_ eq $pos ? ($_, $label) : $_ } @navs;
# munch munch
$link =~ s/%([%nfhb])/$repl{$1}/g;
$arg{$label}{'_href'} = $link;
}
print "<div class=\"page_nav\">\n" .
(join " | ",
map { $_ eq $current ?
$_ : $cgi->a({-href => ($arg{$_}{_href} ? $arg{$_}{_href} : href(%{$arg{$_}}))}, "$_")
} @navs);
print "<br/>\n$extra<br/>\n" .
"</div>\n";
}
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
sub format_paging_nav {
my ($action, $hash, $head, $page, $has_next_link) = @_;
my $paging_nav;
if ($hash ne $head || $page) {
$paging_nav .= $cgi->a({-href => href(action=>$action)}, "HEAD");
} else {
$paging_nav .= "HEAD";
}
if ($page > 0) {
$paging_nav .= " &sdot; " .
$cgi->a({-href => href(-replay=>1, page=>$page-1),
-accesskey => "p", -title => "Alt-p"}, "prev");
} else {
$paging_nav .= " &sdot; prev";
}
if ($has_next_link) {
$paging_nav .= " &sdot; " .
$cgi->a({-href => href(-replay=>1, page=>$page+1),
-accesskey => "n", -title => "Alt-n"}, "next");
} else {
$paging_nav .= " &sdot; next";
}
return $paging_nav;
}
## ......................................................................
## functions printing or outputting HTML: div
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
sub git_print_header_div {
my ($action, $title, $hash, $hash_base) = @_;
my %args = ();
$args{'action'} = $action;
$args{'hash'} = $hash if $hash;
$args{'hash_base'} = $hash_base if $hash_base;
print "<div class=\"header\">\n" .
$cgi->a({-href => href(%args), -class => "title"},
$title ? $title : $action) .
"\n</div>\n";
}
20 years ago
#sub git_print_authorship (\%) {
sub git_print_authorship {
my $co = shift;
my %ad = parse_date($co->{'author_epoch'}, $co->{'author_tz'});
print "<div class=\"author_date\">" .
esc_html($co->{'author_name'}) .
" [$ad{'rfc2822'}";
if ($ad{'hour_local'} < 6) {
printf(" (<span class=\"atnight\">%02d:%02d</span> %s)",
$ad{'hour_local'}, $ad{'minute_local'}, $ad{'tz_local'});
} else {
printf(" (%02d:%02d %s)",
$ad{'hour_local'}, $ad{'minute_local'}, $ad{'tz_local'});
}
print "]</div>\n";
}
sub git_print_page_path {
my $name = shift;
my $type = shift;
my $hb = shift;
20 years ago
print "<div class=\"page_path\">";
print $cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"tree", hash_base=>$hb),
-title => 'tree root'}, to_utf8("[$project]"));
print " / ";
if (defined $name) {
my @dirname = split '/', $name;
my $basename = pop @dirname;
my $fullname = '';
foreach my $dir (@dirname) {
$fullname .= ($fullname ? '/' : '') . $dir;
print $cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"tree", file_name=>$fullname,
hash_base=>$hb),
-title => $fullname}, esc_path($dir));
print " / ";
}
if (defined $type && $type eq 'blob') {
print $cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"blob_plain", file_name=>$file_name,
hash_base=>$hb),
-title => $name}, esc_path($basename));
} elsif (defined $type && $type eq 'tree') {
print $cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"tree", file_name=>$file_name,
hash_base=>$hb),
-title => $name}, esc_path($basename));
print " / ";
} else {
print esc_path($basename);
}
20 years ago
}
print "<br/></div>\n";
20 years ago
}
# sub git_print_log (\@;%) {
sub git_print_log ($;%) {
my $log = shift;
my %opts = @_;
if ($opts{'-remove_title'}) {
# remove title, i.e. first line of log
shift @$log;
}
# remove leading empty lines
while (defined $log->[0] && $log->[0] eq "") {
shift @$log;
}
# print log
my $signoff = 0;
my $empty = 0;
foreach my $line (@$log) {
if ($line =~ m/^ *(signed[ \-]off[ \-]by[ :]|acked[ \-]by[ :]|cc[ :])/i) {
$signoff = 1;
$empty = 0;
if (! $opts{'-remove_signoff'}) {
print "<span class=\"signoff\">" . esc_html($line) . "</span><br/>\n";
next;
} else {
# remove signoff lines
next;
}
} else {
$signoff = 0;
}
# print only one empty line
# do not print empty line after signoff
if ($line eq "") {
next if ($empty || $signoff);
$empty = 1;
} else {
$empty = 0;
}
print format_log_line_html($line) . "<br/>\n";
}
if ($opts{'-final_empty_line'}) {
# end with single empty line
print "<br/>\n" unless $empty;
}
}
# return link target (what link points to)
sub git_get_link_target {
my $hash = shift;
my $link_target;
# read link
open my $fd, "-|", git_cmd(), "cat-file", "blob", $hash
or return;
{
local $/;
$link_target = <$fd>;
}
close $fd
or return;
return $link_target;
}
# given link target, and the directory (basedir) the link is in,
# return target of link relative to top directory (top tree);
# return undef if it is not possible (including absolute links).
sub normalize_link_target {
my ($link_target, $basedir, $hash_base) = @_;
# we can normalize symlink target only if $hash_base is provided
return unless $hash_base;
# absolute symlinks (beginning with '/') cannot be normalized
return if (substr($link_target, 0, 1) eq '/');
# normalize link target to path from top (root) tree (dir)
my $path;
if ($basedir) {
$path = $basedir . '/' . $link_target;
} else {
# we are in top (root) tree (dir)
$path = $link_target;
}
# remove //, /./, and /../
my @path_parts;
foreach my $part (split('/', $path)) {
# discard '.' and ''
next if (!$part || $part eq '.');
# handle '..'
if ($part eq '..') {
if (@path_parts) {
pop @path_parts;
} else {
# link leads outside repository (outside top dir)
return;
}
} else {
push @path_parts, $part;
}
}
$path = join('/', @path_parts);
return $path;
}
# print tree entry (row of git_tree), but without encompassing <tr> element
sub git_print_tree_entry {
my ($t, $basedir, $hash_base, $have_blame) = @_;
my %base_key = ();
$base_key{'hash_base'} = $hash_base if defined $hash_base;
# The format of a table row is: mode list link. Where mode is
# the mode of the entry, list is the name of the entry, an href,
# and link is the action links of the entry.
print "<td class=\"mode\">" . mode_str($t->{'mode'}) . "</td>\n";
if ($t->{'type'} eq "blob") {
print "<td class=\"list\">" .
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"blob", hash=>$t->{'hash'},
file_name=>"$basedir$t->{'name'}", %base_key),
-class => "list"}, esc_path($t->{'name'}));
if (S_ISLNK(oct $t->{'mode'})) {
my $link_target = git_get_link_target($t->{'hash'});
if ($link_target) {
my $norm_target = normalize_link_target($link_target, $basedir, $hash_base);
if (defined $norm_target) {
print " -> " .
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"object", hash_base=>$hash_base,
file_name=>$norm_target),
-title => $norm_target}, esc_path($link_target));
} else {
print " -> " . esc_path($link_target);
}
}
}
print "</td>\n";
print "<td class=\"link\">";
print $cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"blob", hash=>$t->{'hash'},
file_name=>"$basedir$t->{'name'}", %base_key)},
"blob");
if ($have_blame) {
print " | " .
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"blame", hash=>$t->{'hash'},
file_name=>"$basedir$t->{'name'}", %base_key)},
"blame");
}
if (defined $hash_base) {
print " | " .
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"history", hash_base=>$hash_base,
hash=>$t->{'hash'}, file_name=>"$basedir$t->{'name'}")},
"history");
}
print " | " .
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"blob_plain", hash_base=>$hash_base,
file_name=>"$basedir$t->{'name'}")},
"raw");
print "</td>\n";
} elsif ($t->{'type'} eq "tree") {
print "<td class=\"list\">";
print $cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"tree", hash=>$t->{'hash'},
file_name=>"$basedir$t->{'name'}", %base_key)},
esc_path($t->{'name'}));
print "</td>\n";
print "<td class=\"link\">";
print $cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"tree", hash=>$t->{'hash'},
file_name=>"$basedir$t->{'name'}", %base_key)},
"tree");
if (defined $hash_base) {
print " | " .
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"history", hash_base=>$hash_base,
file_name=>"$basedir$t->{'name'}")},
"history");
}
print "</td>\n";
} else {
# unknown object: we can only present history for it
# (this includes 'commit' object, i.e. submodule support)
print "<td class=\"list\">" .
esc_path($t->{'name'}) .
"</td>\n";
print "<td class=\"link\">";
if (defined $hash_base) {
print $cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"history",
hash_base=>$hash_base,
file_name=>"$basedir$t->{'name'}")},
"history");
}
print "</td>\n";
}
}
## ......................................................................
## functions printing large fragments of HTML
gitweb: Fix and simplify "split patch" detection There are some cases when one line from "raw" git-diff output (raw format) corresponds to more than one patch in the patchset git-diff output; we call this situation "split patch". Old code misdetected subsequent patches (for different files) with the same pre-image and post-image as fragments of "split patch", leading to mislabeled from-file/to-file diff header etc. Old code used pre-image and post-image SHA-1 identifier ('from_id' and 'to_id') to check if current patch corresponds to old raw diff format line, to find if one difftree raw line coresponds to more than one patch in the patch format. Now we use post-image filename for that. This assumes that post-image filename alone can be used to identify difftree raw line. In the case this changes (which is unlikely considering current diff engine) we can add 'from_id' and 'to_id' to detect "patch splitting" together with 'to_file'. Because old code got pre-image and post-image SHA-1 identifier for the patch from the "index" line in extended diff header, diff header had to be buffered. New code takes post-image filename from "git diff" header, which is first line of a patch; this allows to simplify git_patchset_body code. A side effect of resigning diff header buffering is that there is always "diff extended_header" div, even if extended diff header is empty. Alternate solution would be to check when git splits patches, and do not check if parsed info from current patch corresponds to current or next raw diff format output line. Git splits patches only for 'T' (typechange) status filepair, and there always two patches corresponding to one raw diff line. It was not used because it would tie gitweb code to minute details of git diff output. While at it, use newly introduced parsed_difftree_line wrapper subroutine in git_difftree_body. Noticed-by: Yann Dirson <ydirson@altern.org> Diagnosed-by: Petr Baudis <pasky@suse.cz> Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
17 years ago
# get pre-image filenames for merge (combined) diff
sub fill_from_file_info {
my ($diff, @parents) = @_;
$diff->{'from_file'} = [ ];
$diff->{'from_file'}[$diff->{'nparents'} - 1] = undef;
for (my $i = 0; $i < $diff->{'nparents'}; $i++) {
if ($diff->{'status'}[$i] eq 'R' ||
$diff->{'status'}[$i] eq 'C') {
$diff->{'from_file'}[$i] =
git_get_path_by_hash($parents[$i], $diff->{'from_id'}[$i]);
}
}
return $diff;
}
gitweb: Fix and simplify "split patch" detection There are some cases when one line from "raw" git-diff output (raw format) corresponds to more than one patch in the patchset git-diff output; we call this situation "split patch". Old code misdetected subsequent patches (for different files) with the same pre-image and post-image as fragments of "split patch", leading to mislabeled from-file/to-file diff header etc. Old code used pre-image and post-image SHA-1 identifier ('from_id' and 'to_id') to check if current patch corresponds to old raw diff format line, to find if one difftree raw line coresponds to more than one patch in the patch format. Now we use post-image filename for that. This assumes that post-image filename alone can be used to identify difftree raw line. In the case this changes (which is unlikely considering current diff engine) we can add 'from_id' and 'to_id' to detect "patch splitting" together with 'to_file'. Because old code got pre-image and post-image SHA-1 identifier for the patch from the "index" line in extended diff header, diff header had to be buffered. New code takes post-image filename from "git diff" header, which is first line of a patch; this allows to simplify git_patchset_body code. A side effect of resigning diff header buffering is that there is always "diff extended_header" div, even if extended diff header is empty. Alternate solution would be to check when git splits patches, and do not check if parsed info from current patch corresponds to current or next raw diff format output line. Git splits patches only for 'T' (typechange) status filepair, and there always two patches corresponding to one raw diff line. It was not used because it would tie gitweb code to minute details of git diff output. While at it, use newly introduced parsed_difftree_line wrapper subroutine in git_difftree_body. Noticed-by: Yann Dirson <ydirson@altern.org> Diagnosed-by: Petr Baudis <pasky@suse.cz> Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
17 years ago
# is current raw difftree line of file deletion
sub is_deleted {
my $diffinfo = shift;
return $diffinfo->{'to_id'} eq ('0' x 40);
}
gitweb: Fix and simplify "split patch" detection There are some cases when one line from "raw" git-diff output (raw format) corresponds to more than one patch in the patchset git-diff output; we call this situation "split patch". Old code misdetected subsequent patches (for different files) with the same pre-image and post-image as fragments of "split patch", leading to mislabeled from-file/to-file diff header etc. Old code used pre-image and post-image SHA-1 identifier ('from_id' and 'to_id') to check if current patch corresponds to old raw diff format line, to find if one difftree raw line coresponds to more than one patch in the patch format. Now we use post-image filename for that. This assumes that post-image filename alone can be used to identify difftree raw line. In the case this changes (which is unlikely considering current diff engine) we can add 'from_id' and 'to_id' to detect "patch splitting" together with 'to_file'. Because old code got pre-image and post-image SHA-1 identifier for the patch from the "index" line in extended diff header, diff header had to be buffered. New code takes post-image filename from "git diff" header, which is first line of a patch; this allows to simplify git_patchset_body code. A side effect of resigning diff header buffering is that there is always "diff extended_header" div, even if extended diff header is empty. Alternate solution would be to check when git splits patches, and do not check if parsed info from current patch corresponds to current or next raw diff format output line. Git splits patches only for 'T' (typechange) status filepair, and there always two patches corresponding to one raw diff line. It was not used because it would tie gitweb code to minute details of git diff output. While at it, use newly introduced parsed_difftree_line wrapper subroutine in git_difftree_body. Noticed-by: Yann Dirson <ydirson@altern.org> Diagnosed-by: Petr Baudis <pasky@suse.cz> Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
17 years ago
# does patch correspond to [previous] difftree raw line
# $diffinfo - hashref of parsed raw diff format
# $patchinfo - hashref of parsed patch diff format
# (the same keys as in $diffinfo)
sub is_patch_split {
my ($diffinfo, $patchinfo) = @_;
return defined $diffinfo && defined $patchinfo
&& $diffinfo->{'to_file'} eq $patchinfo->{'to_file'};
gitweb: Fix and simplify "split patch" detection There are some cases when one line from "raw" git-diff output (raw format) corresponds to more than one patch in the patchset git-diff output; we call this situation "split patch". Old code misdetected subsequent patches (for different files) with the same pre-image and post-image as fragments of "split patch", leading to mislabeled from-file/to-file diff header etc. Old code used pre-image and post-image SHA-1 identifier ('from_id' and 'to_id') to check if current patch corresponds to old raw diff format line, to find if one difftree raw line coresponds to more than one patch in the patch format. Now we use post-image filename for that. This assumes that post-image filename alone can be used to identify difftree raw line. In the case this changes (which is unlikely considering current diff engine) we can add 'from_id' and 'to_id' to detect "patch splitting" together with 'to_file'. Because old code got pre-image and post-image SHA-1 identifier for the patch from the "index" line in extended diff header, diff header had to be buffered. New code takes post-image filename from "git diff" header, which is first line of a patch; this allows to simplify git_patchset_body code. A side effect of resigning diff header buffering is that there is always "diff extended_header" div, even if extended diff header is empty. Alternate solution would be to check when git splits patches, and do not check if parsed info from current patch corresponds to current or next raw diff format output line. Git splits patches only for 'T' (typechange) status filepair, and there always two patches corresponding to one raw diff line. It was not used because it would tie gitweb code to minute details of git diff output. While at it, use newly introduced parsed_difftree_line wrapper subroutine in git_difftree_body. Noticed-by: Yann Dirson <ydirson@altern.org> Diagnosed-by: Petr Baudis <pasky@suse.cz> Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
17 years ago
}
sub git_difftree_body {
gitweb: Add combined diff support to git_difftree_body You have to pass all parents as final parameters of git_difftree_body subroutine; the number of parents of a diff must be equal to the number derived from parsing git-diff-tree output, raw combined diff for git_difftree_body to display combined diff correctly (but it is not checked). Currently the possibility of displaying diffree of combined diff is not used in gitweb code; git_difftree_body is always caled for ordinary diff, and with only one parent. Description of output for combined diff: ---------------------------------------- The difftree table for combined diff starts with a cell with pathname of changed blob (changed file), which if possible is hidden link (class="list") to the 'blob' view of final version (if it exists), like for difftree for ordinary diff. If file was deleted in the final commit then filename is not hyperlinked. There is no cell with single file status (new, deleted, mode change, rename), as for combined diff as there is no single status: different parents might have different status. If git_difftree_body was called from git_commitdiff (for 'commitdiff' action) there is inner link to anchor to appropriate fragment (patch) in patchset body; the "patch" link does not replace "diff" link like for ordinary diff. Each of "diff" links is in separate cell, contrary to output for ordinary diff in which all links are (at least for now) in a single cell. For each parent, if file was not present we leave cell empty. If file was deleted in the result, we provide link to 'blob' view. Otherwise we provide link to 'commitdiff' view, even if patch (diff) consist only of extended diff header, and contents is not changed (pure rename, pure mode change). The only difference is that link to "blobdiff" view with no contents change is with 'nochange' class. At last, there is provided link to current version of file as "blob" link, if the file was not deleted in the result, and lik to history of a file, if there exists one. (The link to file history might be confused, at least for now, by renames.) Note that git-diff-tree raw output dor combined diff does not provide filename before change for renames and copies; we use git_get_path_by_hash to get "src" filename for renames (this means additional call to git-ls-tree for a _whole_ tree). Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
my ($difftree, $hash, @parents) = @_;
my ($parent) = $parents[0];
my $have_blame = gitweb_check_feature('blame');
print "<div class=\"list_head\">\n";
if ($#{$difftree} > 10) {
print(($#{$difftree} + 1) . " files changed:\n");
}
print "</div>\n";
gitweb: Add combined diff support to git_difftree_body You have to pass all parents as final parameters of git_difftree_body subroutine; the number of parents of a diff must be equal to the number derived from parsing git-diff-tree output, raw combined diff for git_difftree_body to display combined diff correctly (but it is not checked). Currently the possibility of displaying diffree of combined diff is not used in gitweb code; git_difftree_body is always caled for ordinary diff, and with only one parent. Description of output for combined diff: ---------------------------------------- The difftree table for combined diff starts with a cell with pathname of changed blob (changed file), which if possible is hidden link (class="list") to the 'blob' view of final version (if it exists), like for difftree for ordinary diff. If file was deleted in the final commit then filename is not hyperlinked. There is no cell with single file status (new, deleted, mode change, rename), as for combined diff as there is no single status: different parents might have different status. If git_difftree_body was called from git_commitdiff (for 'commitdiff' action) there is inner link to anchor to appropriate fragment (patch) in patchset body; the "patch" link does not replace "diff" link like for ordinary diff. Each of "diff" links is in separate cell, contrary to output for ordinary diff in which all links are (at least for now) in a single cell. For each parent, if file was not present we leave cell empty. If file was deleted in the result, we provide link to 'blob' view. Otherwise we provide link to 'commitdiff' view, even if patch (diff) consist only of extended diff header, and contents is not changed (pure rename, pure mode change). The only difference is that link to "blobdiff" view with no contents change is with 'nochange' class. At last, there is provided link to current version of file as "blob" link, if the file was not deleted in the result, and lik to history of a file, if there exists one. (The link to file history might be confused, at least for now, by renames.) Note that git-diff-tree raw output dor combined diff does not provide filename before change for renames and copies; we use git_get_path_by_hash to get "src" filename for renames (this means additional call to git-ls-tree for a _whole_ tree). Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
print "<table class=\"" .
(@parents > 1 ? "combined " : "") .
"diff_tree\">\n";
# header only for combined diff in 'commitdiff' view
my $has_header = @$difftree && @parents > 1 && $action eq 'commitdiff';
if ($has_header) {
# table header
print "<thead><tr>\n" .
"<th></th><th></th>\n"; # filename, patchN link
for (my $i = 0; $i < @parents; $i++) {
my $par = $parents[$i];
print "<th>" .
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"commitdiff",
hash=>$hash, hash_parent=>$par),
-title => 'commitdiff to parent number ' .
($i+1) . ': ' . substr($par,0,7)},
$i+1) .
"&nbsp;</th>\n";
}
print "</tr></thead>\n<tbody>\n";
}
my $alternate = 1;
my $patchno = 0;
foreach my $line (@{$difftree}) {
gitweb: Fix and simplify "split patch" detection There are some cases when one line from "raw" git-diff output (raw format) corresponds to more than one patch in the patchset git-diff output; we call this situation "split patch". Old code misdetected subsequent patches (for different files) with the same pre-image and post-image as fragments of "split patch", leading to mislabeled from-file/to-file diff header etc. Old code used pre-image and post-image SHA-1 identifier ('from_id' and 'to_id') to check if current patch corresponds to old raw diff format line, to find if one difftree raw line coresponds to more than one patch in the patch format. Now we use post-image filename for that. This assumes that post-image filename alone can be used to identify difftree raw line. In the case this changes (which is unlikely considering current diff engine) we can add 'from_id' and 'to_id' to detect "patch splitting" together with 'to_file'. Because old code got pre-image and post-image SHA-1 identifier for the patch from the "index" line in extended diff header, diff header had to be buffered. New code takes post-image filename from "git diff" header, which is first line of a patch; this allows to simplify git_patchset_body code. A side effect of resigning diff header buffering is that there is always "diff extended_header" div, even if extended diff header is empty. Alternate solution would be to check when git splits patches, and do not check if parsed info from current patch corresponds to current or next raw diff format output line. Git splits patches only for 'T' (typechange) status filepair, and there always two patches corresponding to one raw diff line. It was not used because it would tie gitweb code to minute details of git diff output. While at it, use newly introduced parsed_difftree_line wrapper subroutine in git_difftree_body. Noticed-by: Yann Dirson <ydirson@altern.org> Diagnosed-by: Petr Baudis <pasky@suse.cz> Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
17 years ago
my $diff = parsed_difftree_line($line);
if ($alternate) {
print "<tr class=\"dark\">\n";
} else {
print "<tr class=\"light\">\n";
}
$alternate ^= 1;
if (exists $diff->{'nparents'}) { # combined diff
gitweb: Add combined diff support to git_difftree_body You have to pass all parents as final parameters of git_difftree_body subroutine; the number of parents of a diff must be equal to the number derived from parsing git-diff-tree output, raw combined diff for git_difftree_body to display combined diff correctly (but it is not checked). Currently the possibility of displaying diffree of combined diff is not used in gitweb code; git_difftree_body is always caled for ordinary diff, and with only one parent. Description of output for combined diff: ---------------------------------------- The difftree table for combined diff starts with a cell with pathname of changed blob (changed file), which if possible is hidden link (class="list") to the 'blob' view of final version (if it exists), like for difftree for ordinary diff. If file was deleted in the final commit then filename is not hyperlinked. There is no cell with single file status (new, deleted, mode change, rename), as for combined diff as there is no single status: different parents might have different status. If git_difftree_body was called from git_commitdiff (for 'commitdiff' action) there is inner link to anchor to appropriate fragment (patch) in patchset body; the "patch" link does not replace "diff" link like for ordinary diff. Each of "diff" links is in separate cell, contrary to output for ordinary diff in which all links are (at least for now) in a single cell. For each parent, if file was not present we leave cell empty. If file was deleted in the result, we provide link to 'blob' view. Otherwise we provide link to 'commitdiff' view, even if patch (diff) consist only of extended diff header, and contents is not changed (pure rename, pure mode change). The only difference is that link to "blobdiff" view with no contents change is with 'nochange' class. At last, there is provided link to current version of file as "blob" link, if the file was not deleted in the result, and lik to history of a file, if there exists one. (The link to file history might be confused, at least for now, by renames.) Note that git-diff-tree raw output dor combined diff does not provide filename before change for renames and copies; we use git_get_path_by_hash to get "src" filename for renames (this means additional call to git-ls-tree for a _whole_ tree). Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
fill_from_file_info($diff, @parents)
unless exists $diff->{'from_file'};
if (!is_deleted($diff)) {
gitweb: Add combined diff support to git_difftree_body You have to pass all parents as final parameters of git_difftree_body subroutine; the number of parents of a diff must be equal to the number derived from parsing git-diff-tree output, raw combined diff for git_difftree_body to display combined diff correctly (but it is not checked). Currently the possibility of displaying diffree of combined diff is not used in gitweb code; git_difftree_body is always caled for ordinary diff, and with only one parent. Description of output for combined diff: ---------------------------------------- The difftree table for combined diff starts with a cell with pathname of changed blob (changed file), which if possible is hidden link (class="list") to the 'blob' view of final version (if it exists), like for difftree for ordinary diff. If file was deleted in the final commit then filename is not hyperlinked. There is no cell with single file status (new, deleted, mode change, rename), as for combined diff as there is no single status: different parents might have different status. If git_difftree_body was called from git_commitdiff (for 'commitdiff' action) there is inner link to anchor to appropriate fragment (patch) in patchset body; the "patch" link does not replace "diff" link like for ordinary diff. Each of "diff" links is in separate cell, contrary to output for ordinary diff in which all links are (at least for now) in a single cell. For each parent, if file was not present we leave cell empty. If file was deleted in the result, we provide link to 'blob' view. Otherwise we provide link to 'commitdiff' view, even if patch (diff) consist only of extended diff header, and contents is not changed (pure rename, pure mode change). The only difference is that link to "blobdiff" view with no contents change is with 'nochange' class. At last, there is provided link to current version of file as "blob" link, if the file was not deleted in the result, and lik to history of a file, if there exists one. (The link to file history might be confused, at least for now, by renames.) Note that git-diff-tree raw output dor combined diff does not provide filename before change for renames and copies; we use git_get_path_by_hash to get "src" filename for renames (this means additional call to git-ls-tree for a _whole_ tree). Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
# file exists in the result (child) commit
print "<td>" .
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"blob", hash=>$diff->{'to_id'},
file_name=>$diff->{'to_file'},
gitweb: Add combined diff support to git_difftree_body You have to pass all parents as final parameters of git_difftree_body subroutine; the number of parents of a diff must be equal to the number derived from parsing git-diff-tree output, raw combined diff for git_difftree_body to display combined diff correctly (but it is not checked). Currently the possibility of displaying diffree of combined diff is not used in gitweb code; git_difftree_body is always caled for ordinary diff, and with only one parent. Description of output for combined diff: ---------------------------------------- The difftree table for combined diff starts with a cell with pathname of changed blob (changed file), which if possible is hidden link (class="list") to the 'blob' view of final version (if it exists), like for difftree for ordinary diff. If file was deleted in the final commit then filename is not hyperlinked. There is no cell with single file status (new, deleted, mode change, rename), as for combined diff as there is no single status: different parents might have different status. If git_difftree_body was called from git_commitdiff (for 'commitdiff' action) there is inner link to anchor to appropriate fragment (patch) in patchset body; the "patch" link does not replace "diff" link like for ordinary diff. Each of "diff" links is in separate cell, contrary to output for ordinary diff in which all links are (at least for now) in a single cell. For each parent, if file was not present we leave cell empty. If file was deleted in the result, we provide link to 'blob' view. Otherwise we provide link to 'commitdiff' view, even if patch (diff) consist only of extended diff header, and contents is not changed (pure rename, pure mode change). The only difference is that link to "blobdiff" view with no contents change is with 'nochange' class. At last, there is provided link to current version of file as "blob" link, if the file was not deleted in the result, and lik to history of a file, if there exists one. (The link to file history might be confused, at least for now, by renames.) Note that git-diff-tree raw output dor combined diff does not provide filename before change for renames and copies; we use git_get_path_by_hash to get "src" filename for renames (this means additional call to git-ls-tree for a _whole_ tree). Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
hash_base=>$hash),
-class => "list"}, esc_path($diff->{'to_file'})) .
gitweb: Add combined diff support to git_difftree_body You have to pass all parents as final parameters of git_difftree_body subroutine; the number of parents of a diff must be equal to the number derived from parsing git-diff-tree output, raw combined diff for git_difftree_body to display combined diff correctly (but it is not checked). Currently the possibility of displaying diffree of combined diff is not used in gitweb code; git_difftree_body is always caled for ordinary diff, and with only one parent. Description of output for combined diff: ---------------------------------------- The difftree table for combined diff starts with a cell with pathname of changed blob (changed file), which if possible is hidden link (class="list") to the 'blob' view of final version (if it exists), like for difftree for ordinary diff. If file was deleted in the final commit then filename is not hyperlinked. There is no cell with single file status (new, deleted, mode change, rename), as for combined diff as there is no single status: different parents might have different status. If git_difftree_body was called from git_commitdiff (for 'commitdiff' action) there is inner link to anchor to appropriate fragment (patch) in patchset body; the "patch" link does not replace "diff" link like for ordinary diff. Each of "diff" links is in separate cell, contrary to output for ordinary diff in which all links are (at least for now) in a single cell. For each parent, if file was not present we leave cell empty. If file was deleted in the result, we provide link to 'blob' view. Otherwise we provide link to 'commitdiff' view, even if patch (diff) consist only of extended diff header, and contents is not changed (pure rename, pure mode change). The only difference is that link to "blobdiff" view with no contents change is with 'nochange' class. At last, there is provided link to current version of file as "blob" link, if the file was not deleted in the result, and lik to history of a file, if there exists one. (The link to file history might be confused, at least for now, by renames.) Note that git-diff-tree raw output dor combined diff does not provide filename before change for renames and copies; we use git_get_path_by_hash to get "src" filename for renames (this means additional call to git-ls-tree for a _whole_ tree). Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
"</td>\n";
} else {
print "<td>" .
esc_path($diff->{'to_file'}) .
gitweb: Add combined diff support to git_difftree_body You have to pass all parents as final parameters of git_difftree_body subroutine; the number of parents of a diff must be equal to the number derived from parsing git-diff-tree output, raw combined diff for git_difftree_body to display combined diff correctly (but it is not checked). Currently the possibility of displaying diffree of combined diff is not used in gitweb code; git_difftree_body is always caled for ordinary diff, and with only one parent. Description of output for combined diff: ---------------------------------------- The difftree table for combined diff starts with a cell with pathname of changed blob (changed file), which if possible is hidden link (class="list") to the 'blob' view of final version (if it exists), like for difftree for ordinary diff. If file was deleted in the final commit then filename is not hyperlinked. There is no cell with single file status (new, deleted, mode change, rename), as for combined diff as there is no single status: different parents might have different status. If git_difftree_body was called from git_commitdiff (for 'commitdiff' action) there is inner link to anchor to appropriate fragment (patch) in patchset body; the "patch" link does not replace "diff" link like for ordinary diff. Each of "diff" links is in separate cell, contrary to output for ordinary diff in which all links are (at least for now) in a single cell. For each parent, if file was not present we leave cell empty. If file was deleted in the result, we provide link to 'blob' view. Otherwise we provide link to 'commitdiff' view, even if patch (diff) consist only of extended diff header, and contents is not changed (pure rename, pure mode change). The only difference is that link to "blobdiff" view with no contents change is with 'nochange' class. At last, there is provided link to current version of file as "blob" link, if the file was not deleted in the result, and lik to history of a file, if there exists one. (The link to file history might be confused, at least for now, by renames.) Note that git-diff-tree raw output dor combined diff does not provide filename before change for renames and copies; we use git_get_path_by_hash to get "src" filename for renames (this means additional call to git-ls-tree for a _whole_ tree). Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
"</td>\n";
}
if ($action eq 'commitdiff') {
# link to patch
$patchno++;
print "<td class=\"link\">" .
$cgi->a({-href => "#patch$patchno"}, "patch") .
" | " .
"</td>\n";
}
my $has_history = 0;
my $not_deleted = 0;
for (my $i = 0; $i < $diff->{'nparents'}; $i++) {
gitweb: Add combined diff support to git_difftree_body You have to pass all parents as final parameters of git_difftree_body subroutine; the number of parents of a diff must be equal to the number derived from parsing git-diff-tree output, raw combined diff for git_difftree_body to display combined diff correctly (but it is not checked). Currently the possibility of displaying diffree of combined diff is not used in gitweb code; git_difftree_body is always caled for ordinary diff, and with only one parent. Description of output for combined diff: ---------------------------------------- The difftree table for combined diff starts with a cell with pathname of changed blob (changed file), which if possible is hidden link (class="list") to the 'blob' view of final version (if it exists), like for difftree for ordinary diff. If file was deleted in the final commit then filename is not hyperlinked. There is no cell with single file status (new, deleted, mode change, rename), as for combined diff as there is no single status: different parents might have different status. If git_difftree_body was called from git_commitdiff (for 'commitdiff' action) there is inner link to anchor to appropriate fragment (patch) in patchset body; the "patch" link does not replace "diff" link like for ordinary diff. Each of "diff" links is in separate cell, contrary to output for ordinary diff in which all links are (at least for now) in a single cell. For each parent, if file was not present we leave cell empty. If file was deleted in the result, we provide link to 'blob' view. Otherwise we provide link to 'commitdiff' view, even if patch (diff) consist only of extended diff header, and contents is not changed (pure rename, pure mode change). The only difference is that link to "blobdiff" view with no contents change is with 'nochange' class. At last, there is provided link to current version of file as "blob" link, if the file was not deleted in the result, and lik to history of a file, if there exists one. (The link to file history might be confused, at least for now, by renames.) Note that git-diff-tree raw output dor combined diff does not provide filename before change for renames and copies; we use git_get_path_by_hash to get "src" filename for renames (this means additional call to git-ls-tree for a _whole_ tree). Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
my $hash_parent = $parents[$i];
my $from_hash = $diff->{'from_id'}[$i];
my $from_path = $diff->{'from_file'}[$i];
my $status = $diff->{'status'}[$i];
gitweb: Add combined diff support to git_difftree_body You have to pass all parents as final parameters of git_difftree_body subroutine; the number of parents of a diff must be equal to the number derived from parsing git-diff-tree output, raw combined diff for git_difftree_body to display combined diff correctly (but it is not checked). Currently the possibility of displaying diffree of combined diff is not used in gitweb code; git_difftree_body is always caled for ordinary diff, and with only one parent. Description of output for combined diff: ---------------------------------------- The difftree table for combined diff starts with a cell with pathname of changed blob (changed file), which if possible is hidden link (class="list") to the 'blob' view of final version (if it exists), like for difftree for ordinary diff. If file was deleted in the final commit then filename is not hyperlinked. There is no cell with single file status (new, deleted, mode change, rename), as for combined diff as there is no single status: different parents might have different status. If git_difftree_body was called from git_commitdiff (for 'commitdiff' action) there is inner link to anchor to appropriate fragment (patch) in patchset body; the "patch" link does not replace "diff" link like for ordinary diff. Each of "diff" links is in separate cell, contrary to output for ordinary diff in which all links are (at least for now) in a single cell. For each parent, if file was not present we leave cell empty. If file was deleted in the result, we provide link to 'blob' view. Otherwise we provide link to 'commitdiff' view, even if patch (diff) consist only of extended diff header, and contents is not changed (pure rename, pure mode change). The only difference is that link to "blobdiff" view with no contents change is with 'nochange' class. At last, there is provided link to current version of file as "blob" link, if the file was not deleted in the result, and lik to history of a file, if there exists one. (The link to file history might be confused, at least for now, by renames.) Note that git-diff-tree raw output dor combined diff does not provide filename before change for renames and copies; we use git_get_path_by_hash to get "src" filename for renames (this means additional call to git-ls-tree for a _whole_ tree). Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
$has_history ||= ($status ne 'A');
$not_deleted ||= ($status ne 'D');
if ($status eq 'A') {
print "<td class=\"link\" align=\"right\"> | </td>\n";
} elsif ($status eq 'D') {
print "<td class=\"link\">" .
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"blob",
hash_base=>$hash,
hash=>$from_hash,
file_name=>$from_path)},
"blob" . ($i+1)) .
" | </td>\n";
} else {
if ($diff->{'to_id'} eq $from_hash) {
gitweb: Add combined diff support to git_difftree_body You have to pass all parents as final parameters of git_difftree_body subroutine; the number of parents of a diff must be equal to the number derived from parsing git-diff-tree output, raw combined diff for git_difftree_body to display combined diff correctly (but it is not checked). Currently the possibility of displaying diffree of combined diff is not used in gitweb code; git_difftree_body is always caled for ordinary diff, and with only one parent. Description of output for combined diff: ---------------------------------------- The difftree table for combined diff starts with a cell with pathname of changed blob (changed file), which if possible is hidden link (class="list") to the 'blob' view of final version (if it exists), like for difftree for ordinary diff. If file was deleted in the final commit then filename is not hyperlinked. There is no cell with single file status (new, deleted, mode change, rename), as for combined diff as there is no single status: different parents might have different status. If git_difftree_body was called from git_commitdiff (for 'commitdiff' action) there is inner link to anchor to appropriate fragment (patch) in patchset body; the "patch" link does not replace "diff" link like for ordinary diff. Each of "diff" links is in separate cell, contrary to output for ordinary diff in which all links are (at least for now) in a single cell. For each parent, if file was not present we leave cell empty. If file was deleted in the result, we provide link to 'blob' view. Otherwise we provide link to 'commitdiff' view, even if patch (diff) consist only of extended diff header, and contents is not changed (pure rename, pure mode change). The only difference is that link to "blobdiff" view with no contents change is with 'nochange' class. At last, there is provided link to current version of file as "blob" link, if the file was not deleted in the result, and lik to history of a file, if there exists one. (The link to file history might be confused, at least for now, by renames.) Note that git-diff-tree raw output dor combined diff does not provide filename before change for renames and copies; we use git_get_path_by_hash to get "src" filename for renames (this means additional call to git-ls-tree for a _whole_ tree). Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
print "<td class=\"link nochange\">";
} else {
print "<td class=\"link\">";
}
print $cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"blobdiff",
hash=>$diff->{'to_id'},
gitweb: Add combined diff support to git_difftree_body You have to pass all parents as final parameters of git_difftree_body subroutine; the number of parents of a diff must be equal to the number derived from parsing git-diff-tree output, raw combined diff for git_difftree_body to display combined diff correctly (but it is not checked). Currently the possibility of displaying diffree of combined diff is not used in gitweb code; git_difftree_body is always caled for ordinary diff, and with only one parent. Description of output for combined diff: ---------------------------------------- The difftree table for combined diff starts with a cell with pathname of changed blob (changed file), which if possible is hidden link (class="list") to the 'blob' view of final version (if it exists), like for difftree for ordinary diff. If file was deleted in the final commit then filename is not hyperlinked. There is no cell with single file status (new, deleted, mode change, rename), as for combined diff as there is no single status: different parents might have different status. If git_difftree_body was called from git_commitdiff (for 'commitdiff' action) there is inner link to anchor to appropriate fragment (patch) in patchset body; the "patch" link does not replace "diff" link like for ordinary diff. Each of "diff" links is in separate cell, contrary to output for ordinary diff in which all links are (at least for now) in a single cell. For each parent, if file was not present we leave cell empty. If file was deleted in the result, we provide link to 'blob' view. Otherwise we provide link to 'commitdiff' view, even if patch (diff) consist only of extended diff header, and contents is not changed (pure rename, pure mode change). The only difference is that link to "blobdiff" view with no contents change is with 'nochange' class. At last, there is provided link to current version of file as "blob" link, if the file was not deleted in the result, and lik to history of a file, if there exists one. (The link to file history might be confused, at least for now, by renames.) Note that git-diff-tree raw output dor combined diff does not provide filename before change for renames and copies; we use git_get_path_by_hash to get "src" filename for renames (this means additional call to git-ls-tree for a _whole_ tree). Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
hash_parent=>$from_hash,
hash_base=>$hash,
hash_parent_base=>$hash_parent,
file_name=>$diff->{'to_file'},
gitweb: Add combined diff support to git_difftree_body You have to pass all parents as final parameters of git_difftree_body subroutine; the number of parents of a diff must be equal to the number derived from parsing git-diff-tree output, raw combined diff for git_difftree_body to display combined diff correctly (but it is not checked). Currently the possibility of displaying diffree of combined diff is not used in gitweb code; git_difftree_body is always caled for ordinary diff, and with only one parent. Description of output for combined diff: ---------------------------------------- The difftree table for combined diff starts with a cell with pathname of changed blob (changed file), which if possible is hidden link (class="list") to the 'blob' view of final version (if it exists), like for difftree for ordinary diff. If file was deleted in the final commit then filename is not hyperlinked. There is no cell with single file status (new, deleted, mode change, rename), as for combined diff as there is no single status: different parents might have different status. If git_difftree_body was called from git_commitdiff (for 'commitdiff' action) there is inner link to anchor to appropriate fragment (patch) in patchset body; the "patch" link does not replace "diff" link like for ordinary diff. Each of "diff" links is in separate cell, contrary to output for ordinary diff in which all links are (at least for now) in a single cell. For each parent, if file was not present we leave cell empty. If file was deleted in the result, we provide link to 'blob' view. Otherwise we provide link to 'commitdiff' view, even if patch (diff) consist only of extended diff header, and contents is not changed (pure rename, pure mode change). The only difference is that link to "blobdiff" view with no contents change is with 'nochange' class. At last, there is provided link to current version of file as "blob" link, if the file was not deleted in the result, and lik to history of a file, if there exists one. (The link to file history might be confused, at least for now, by renames.) Note that git-diff-tree raw output dor combined diff does not provide filename before change for renames and copies; we use git_get_path_by_hash to get "src" filename for renames (this means additional call to git-ls-tree for a _whole_ tree). Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
file_parent=>$from_path)},
"diff" . ($i+1)) .
" | </td>\n";
}
}
print "<td class=\"link\">";
if ($not_deleted) {
print $cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"blob",
hash=>$diff->{'to_id'},
file_name=>$diff->{'to_file'},
gitweb: Add combined diff support to git_difftree_body You have to pass all parents as final parameters of git_difftree_body subroutine; the number of parents of a diff must be equal to the number derived from parsing git-diff-tree output, raw combined diff for git_difftree_body to display combined diff correctly (but it is not checked). Currently the possibility of displaying diffree of combined diff is not used in gitweb code; git_difftree_body is always caled for ordinary diff, and with only one parent. Description of output for combined diff: ---------------------------------------- The difftree table for combined diff starts with a cell with pathname of changed blob (changed file), which if possible is hidden link (class="list") to the 'blob' view of final version (if it exists), like for difftree for ordinary diff. If file was deleted in the final commit then filename is not hyperlinked. There is no cell with single file status (new, deleted, mode change, rename), as for combined diff as there is no single status: different parents might have different status. If git_difftree_body was called from git_commitdiff (for 'commitdiff' action) there is inner link to anchor to appropriate fragment (patch) in patchset body; the "patch" link does not replace "diff" link like for ordinary diff. Each of "diff" links is in separate cell, contrary to output for ordinary diff in which all links are (at least for now) in a single cell. For each parent, if file was not present we leave cell empty. If file was deleted in the result, we provide link to 'blob' view. Otherwise we provide link to 'commitdiff' view, even if patch (diff) consist only of extended diff header, and contents is not changed (pure rename, pure mode change). The only difference is that link to "blobdiff" view with no contents change is with 'nochange' class. At last, there is provided link to current version of file as "blob" link, if the file was not deleted in the result, and lik to history of a file, if there exists one. (The link to file history might be confused, at least for now, by renames.) Note that git-diff-tree raw output dor combined diff does not provide filename before change for renames and copies; we use git_get_path_by_hash to get "src" filename for renames (this means additional call to git-ls-tree for a _whole_ tree). Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
hash_base=>$hash)},
"blob");
print " | " if ($has_history);
}
if ($has_history) {
print $cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"history",
file_name=>$diff->{'to_file'},
gitweb: Add combined diff support to git_difftree_body You have to pass all parents as final parameters of git_difftree_body subroutine; the number of parents of a diff must be equal to the number derived from parsing git-diff-tree output, raw combined diff for git_difftree_body to display combined diff correctly (but it is not checked). Currently the possibility of displaying diffree of combined diff is not used in gitweb code; git_difftree_body is always caled for ordinary diff, and with only one parent. Description of output for combined diff: ---------------------------------------- The difftree table for combined diff starts with a cell with pathname of changed blob (changed file), which if possible is hidden link (class="list") to the 'blob' view of final version (if it exists), like for difftree for ordinary diff. If file was deleted in the final commit then filename is not hyperlinked. There is no cell with single file status (new, deleted, mode change, rename), as for combined diff as there is no single status: different parents might have different status. If git_difftree_body was called from git_commitdiff (for 'commitdiff' action) there is inner link to anchor to appropriate fragment (patch) in patchset body; the "patch" link does not replace "diff" link like for ordinary diff. Each of "diff" links is in separate cell, contrary to output for ordinary diff in which all links are (at least for now) in a single cell. For each parent, if file was not present we leave cell empty. If file was deleted in the result, we provide link to 'blob' view. Otherwise we provide link to 'commitdiff' view, even if patch (diff) consist only of extended diff header, and contents is not changed (pure rename, pure mode change). The only difference is that link to "blobdiff" view with no contents change is with 'nochange' class. At last, there is provided link to current version of file as "blob" link, if the file was not deleted in the result, and lik to history of a file, if there exists one. (The link to file history might be confused, at least for now, by renames.) Note that git-diff-tree raw output dor combined diff does not provide filename before change for renames and copies; we use git_get_path_by_hash to get "src" filename for renames (this means additional call to git-ls-tree for a _whole_ tree). Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
hash_base=>$hash)},
"history");
}
print "</td>\n";
print "</tr>\n";
next; # instead of 'else' clause, to avoid extra indent
}
# else ordinary diff
my ($to_mode_oct, $to_mode_str, $to_file_type);
my ($from_mode_oct, $from_mode_str, $from_file_type);
if ($diff->{'to_mode'} ne ('0' x 6)) {
$to_mode_oct = oct $diff->{'to_mode'};
if (S_ISREG($to_mode_oct)) { # only for regular file
$to_mode_str = sprintf("%04o", $to_mode_oct & 0777); # permission bits
}
$to_file_type = file_type($diff->{'to_mode'});
}
if ($diff->{'from_mode'} ne ('0' x 6)) {
$from_mode_oct = oct $diff->{'from_mode'};
if (S_ISREG($to_mode_oct)) { # only for regular file
$from_mode_str = sprintf("%04o", $from_mode_oct & 0777); # permission bits
}
$from_file_type = file_type($diff->{'from_mode'});
}
if ($diff->{'status'} eq "A") { # created
my $mode_chng = "<span class=\"file_status new\">[new $to_file_type";
$mode_chng .= " with mode: $to_mode_str" if $to_mode_str;
$mode_chng .= "]</span>";
print "<td>";
print $cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"blob", hash=>$diff->{'to_id'},
hash_base=>$hash, file_name=>$diff->{'file'}),
-class => "list"}, esc_path($diff->{'file'}));
print "</td>\n";
print "<td>$mode_chng</td>\n";
print "<td class=\"link\">";
if ($action eq 'commitdiff') {
# link to patch
$patchno++;
print $cgi->a({-href => "#patch$patchno"}, "patch");
print " | ";
}
print $cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"blob", hash=>$diff->{'to_id'},
hash_base=>$hash, file_name=>$diff->{'file'})},
"blob");
print "</td>\n";
} elsif ($diff->{'status'} eq "D") { # deleted
my $mode_chng = "<span class=\"file_status deleted\">[deleted $from_file_type]</span>";
print "<td>";
print $cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"blob", hash=>$diff->{'from_id'},
hash_base=>$parent, file_name=>$diff->{'file'}),
-class => "list"}, esc_path($diff->{'file'}));
print "</td>\n";
print "<td>$mode_chng</td>\n";
print "<td class=\"link\">";
if ($action eq 'commitdiff') {
# link to patch
$patchno++;
print $cgi->a({-href => "#patch$patchno"}, "patch");
print " | ";
}
print $cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"blob", hash=>$diff->{'from_id'},
hash_base=>$parent, file_name=>$diff->{'file'})},
"blob") . " | ";
if ($have_blame) {
print $cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"blame", hash_base=>$parent,
file_name=>$diff->{'file'})},
"blame") . " | ";
}
print $cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"history", hash_base=>$parent,
file_name=>$diff->{'file'})},
"history");
print "</td>\n";
} elsif ($diff->{'status'} eq "M" || $diff->{'status'} eq "T") { # modified, or type changed
my $mode_chnge = "";
if ($diff->{'from_mode'} != $diff->{'to_mode'}) {
$mode_chnge = "<span class=\"file_status mode_chnge\">[changed";
if ($from_file_type ne $to_file_type) {
$mode_chnge .= " from $from_file_type to $to_file_type";
}
if (($from_mode_oct & 0777) != ($to_mode_oct & 0777)) {
if ($from_mode_str && $to_mode_str) {
$mode_chnge .= " mode: $from_mode_str->$to_mode_str";
} elsif ($to_mode_str) {
$mode_chnge .= " mode: $to_mode_str";
}
}
$mode_chnge .= "]</span>\n";
}
print "<td>";
print $cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"blob", hash=>$diff->{'to_id'},
hash_base=>$hash, file_name=>$diff->{'file'}),
-class => "list"}, esc_path($diff->{'file'}));
print "</td>\n";
print "<td>$mode_chnge</td>\n";
print "<td class=\"link\">";
if ($action eq 'commitdiff') {
# link to patch
$patchno++;
print $cgi->a({-href => "#patch$patchno"}, "patch") .
" | ";
} elsif ($diff->{'to_id'} ne $diff->{'from_id'}) {
# "commit" view and modified file (not onlu mode changed)
print $cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"blobdiff",
hash=>$diff->{'to_id'}, hash_parent=>$diff->{'from_id'},
hash_base=>$hash, hash_parent_base=>$parent,
file_name=>$diff->{'file'})},
"diff") .
" | ";
}
print $cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"blob", hash=>$diff->{'to_id'},
hash_base=>$hash, file_name=>$diff->{'file'})},
"blob") . " | ";
if ($have_blame) {
print $cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"blame", hash_base=>$hash,
file_name=>$diff->{'file'})},
"blame") . " | ";
}
print $cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"history", hash_base=>$hash,
file_name=>$diff->{'file'})},
"history");
print "</td>\n";
} elsif ($diff->{'status'} eq "R" || $diff->{'status'} eq "C") { # renamed or copied
my %status_name = ('R' => 'moved', 'C' => 'copied');
my $nstatus = $status_name{$diff->{'status'}};
my $mode_chng = "";
if ($diff->{'from_mode'} != $diff->{'to_mode'}) {
# mode also for directories, so we cannot use $to_mode_str
$mode_chng = sprintf(", mode: %04o", $to_mode_oct & 0777);
}
print "<td>" .
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"blob", hash_base=>$hash,
hash=>$diff->{'to_id'}, file_name=>$diff->{'to_file'}),
-class => "list"}, esc_path($diff->{'to_file'})) . "</td>\n" .
"<td><span class=\"file_status $nstatus\">[$nstatus from " .
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"blob", hash_base=>$parent,
hash=>$diff->{'from_id'}, file_name=>$diff->{'from_file'}),
-class => "list"}, esc_path($diff->{'from_file'})) .
" with " . (int $diff->{'similarity'}) . "% similarity$mode_chng]</span></td>\n" .
"<td class=\"link\">";
if ($action eq 'commitdiff') {
# link to patch
$patchno++;
print $cgi->a({-href => "#patch$patchno"}, "patch") .
" | ";
} elsif ($diff->{'to_id'} ne $diff->{'from_id'}) {
# "commit" view and modified file (not only pure rename or copy)
print $cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"blobdiff",
hash=>$diff->{'to_id'}, hash_parent=>$diff->{'from_id'},
hash_base=>$hash, hash_parent_base=>$parent,
file_name=>$diff->{'to_file'}, file_parent=>$diff->{'from_file'})},
"diff") .
" | ";
}
print $cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"blob", hash=>$diff->{'to_id'},
hash_base=>$parent, file_name=>$diff->{'to_file'})},
"blob") . " | ";
if ($have_blame) {
print $cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"blame", hash_base=>$hash,
file_name=>$diff->{'to_file'})},
"blame") . " | ";
}
print $cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"history", hash_base=>$hash,
file_name=>$diff->{'to_file'})},
"history");
print "</td>\n";
} # we should not encounter Unmerged (U) or Unknown (X) status
print "</tr>\n";
}
print "</tbody>" if $has_header;
print "</table>\n";
}
gitweb: Use git-diff-tree patch output for commitdiff Get rid of git_diff_print invocation in git_commitdiff and therefore external diff (/usr/bin/diff) invocation, and use only git-diff-tree to generate patch. git_commitdiff and git_commitdiff_plain are collapsed into one subroutine git_commitdiff, with format (currently 'html' which is default format corresponding to git_commitdiff, and 'plain' corresponding to git_commitdiff_plain) specified in argument. Separate patch (diff) pretty-printing into git_patchset_body. It is used in git_commitdiff. Separate patch (diff) line formatting from git_diff_print into format_diff_line function. It is used in git_patchset_body. While at it, add $hash parameter to git_difftree_body, according to rule that inner functions should use parameter passing, and not global variables. CHANGES TO OUTPUT: * "commitdiff" now products patches with renaming and copying detection (git-diff-tree is invoked with -M and -C options). Empty patches (mode changes and pure renames and copying) are not written currently. Former version broke renaming and copying, and didn't notice mode changes, like this version. * "commitdiff" output is now divided into several div elements of class "log", "patchset" and "patch". * "commitdiff_plain" now only generates X-Git-Tag: line only if there is tag pointing to the current commit. Former version which wrote first tag following current commit was broken[*1*]; besides we are interested rather in tags _preceding_ the commit, and _heads_ following the commit. X-Git-Url: now is current URL; former version tried[*2*] to output URL to HTML version of commitdiff. * "commitdiff_plain" is generated by git-diff-tree, and has therefore has git specific extensions to diff format: "git diff" header and optional extended header lines. FOOTNOTES [*1*] First it generated rev-list starting from HEAD even if hash_base parameter was set, second it wasn't corrected according to changes made in git_get_references (formerly read_info_ref) output, third even for older version of read_info_ref output it didn't work for multiple tags pointing to the current commit (rare). [*2*] It wrote URL for commitdiff without hash_parent, which produces diff to first parent and is not the same as current diff if it is diff of merge commit to non-first parent. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
sub git_patchset_body {
my ($fd, $difftree, $hash, @hash_parents) = @_;
my ($hash_parent) = $hash_parents[0];
gitweb: Use git-diff-tree patch output for commitdiff Get rid of git_diff_print invocation in git_commitdiff and therefore external diff (/usr/bin/diff) invocation, and use only git-diff-tree to generate patch. git_commitdiff and git_commitdiff_plain are collapsed into one subroutine git_commitdiff, with format (currently 'html' which is default format corresponding to git_commitdiff, and 'plain' corresponding to git_commitdiff_plain) specified in argument. Separate patch (diff) pretty-printing into git_patchset_body. It is used in git_commitdiff. Separate patch (diff) line formatting from git_diff_print into format_diff_line function. It is used in git_patchset_body. While at it, add $hash parameter to git_difftree_body, according to rule that inner functions should use parameter passing, and not global variables. CHANGES TO OUTPUT: * "commitdiff" now products patches with renaming and copying detection (git-diff-tree is invoked with -M and -C options). Empty patches (mode changes and pure renames and copying) are not written currently. Former version broke renaming and copying, and didn't notice mode changes, like this version. * "commitdiff" output is now divided into several div elements of class "log", "patchset" and "patch". * "commitdiff_plain" now only generates X-Git-Tag: line only if there is tag pointing to the current commit. Former version which wrote first tag following current commit was broken[*1*]; besides we are interested rather in tags _preceding_ the commit, and _heads_ following the commit. X-Git-Url: now is current URL; former version tried[*2*] to output URL to HTML version of commitdiff. * "commitdiff_plain" is generated by git-diff-tree, and has therefore has git specific extensions to diff format: "git diff" header and optional extended header lines. FOOTNOTES [*1*] First it generated rev-list starting from HEAD even if hash_base parameter was set, second it wasn't corrected according to changes made in git_get_references (formerly read_info_ref) output, third even for older version of read_info_ref output it didn't work for multiple tags pointing to the current commit (rare). [*2*] It wrote URL for commitdiff without hash_parent, which produces diff to first parent and is not the same as current diff if it is diff of merge commit to non-first parent. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
gitweb: Fix and simplify "split patch" detection There are some cases when one line from "raw" git-diff output (raw format) corresponds to more than one patch in the patchset git-diff output; we call this situation "split patch". Old code misdetected subsequent patches (for different files) with the same pre-image and post-image as fragments of "split patch", leading to mislabeled from-file/to-file diff header etc. Old code used pre-image and post-image SHA-1 identifier ('from_id' and 'to_id') to check if current patch corresponds to old raw diff format line, to find if one difftree raw line coresponds to more than one patch in the patch format. Now we use post-image filename for that. This assumes that post-image filename alone can be used to identify difftree raw line. In the case this changes (which is unlikely considering current diff engine) we can add 'from_id' and 'to_id' to detect "patch splitting" together with 'to_file'. Because old code got pre-image and post-image SHA-1 identifier for the patch from the "index" line in extended diff header, diff header had to be buffered. New code takes post-image filename from "git diff" header, which is first line of a patch; this allows to simplify git_patchset_body code. A side effect of resigning diff header buffering is that there is always "diff extended_header" div, even if extended diff header is empty. Alternate solution would be to check when git splits patches, and do not check if parsed info from current patch corresponds to current or next raw diff format output line. Git splits patches only for 'T' (typechange) status filepair, and there always two patches corresponding to one raw diff line. It was not used because it would tie gitweb code to minute details of git diff output. While at it, use newly introduced parsed_difftree_line wrapper subroutine in git_difftree_body. Noticed-by: Yann Dirson <ydirson@altern.org> Diagnosed-by: Petr Baudis <pasky@suse.cz> Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
17 years ago
my $is_combined = (@hash_parents > 1);
gitweb: Use git-diff-tree patch output for commitdiff Get rid of git_diff_print invocation in git_commitdiff and therefore external diff (/usr/bin/diff) invocation, and use only git-diff-tree to generate patch. git_commitdiff and git_commitdiff_plain are collapsed into one subroutine git_commitdiff, with format (currently 'html' which is default format corresponding to git_commitdiff, and 'plain' corresponding to git_commitdiff_plain) specified in argument. Separate patch (diff) pretty-printing into git_patchset_body. It is used in git_commitdiff. Separate patch (diff) line formatting from git_diff_print into format_diff_line function. It is used in git_patchset_body. While at it, add $hash parameter to git_difftree_body, according to rule that inner functions should use parameter passing, and not global variables. CHANGES TO OUTPUT: * "commitdiff" now products patches with renaming and copying detection (git-diff-tree is invoked with -M and -C options). Empty patches (mode changes and pure renames and copying) are not written currently. Former version broke renaming and copying, and didn't notice mode changes, like this version. * "commitdiff" output is now divided into several div elements of class "log", "patchset" and "patch". * "commitdiff_plain" now only generates X-Git-Tag: line only if there is tag pointing to the current commit. Former version which wrote first tag following current commit was broken[*1*]; besides we are interested rather in tags _preceding_ the commit, and _heads_ following the commit. X-Git-Url: now is current URL; former version tried[*2*] to output URL to HTML version of commitdiff. * "commitdiff_plain" is generated by git-diff-tree, and has therefore has git specific extensions to diff format: "git diff" header and optional extended header lines. FOOTNOTES [*1*] First it generated rev-list starting from HEAD even if hash_base parameter was set, second it wasn't corrected according to changes made in git_get_references (formerly read_info_ref) output, third even for older version of read_info_ref output it didn't work for multiple tags pointing to the current commit (rare). [*2*] It wrote URL for commitdiff without hash_parent, which produces diff to first parent and is not the same as current diff if it is diff of merge commit to non-first parent. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
my $patch_idx = 0;
my $patch_number = 0;
my $patch_line;
my $diffinfo;
gitweb: Fix and simplify "split patch" detection There are some cases when one line from "raw" git-diff output (raw format) corresponds to more than one patch in the patchset git-diff output; we call this situation "split patch". Old code misdetected subsequent patches (for different files) with the same pre-image and post-image as fragments of "split patch", leading to mislabeled from-file/to-file diff header etc. Old code used pre-image and post-image SHA-1 identifier ('from_id' and 'to_id') to check if current patch corresponds to old raw diff format line, to find if one difftree raw line coresponds to more than one patch in the patch format. Now we use post-image filename for that. This assumes that post-image filename alone can be used to identify difftree raw line. In the case this changes (which is unlikely considering current diff engine) we can add 'from_id' and 'to_id' to detect "patch splitting" together with 'to_file'. Because old code got pre-image and post-image SHA-1 identifier for the patch from the "index" line in extended diff header, diff header had to be buffered. New code takes post-image filename from "git diff" header, which is first line of a patch; this allows to simplify git_patchset_body code. A side effect of resigning diff header buffering is that there is always "diff extended_header" div, even if extended diff header is empty. Alternate solution would be to check when git splits patches, and do not check if parsed info from current patch corresponds to current or next raw diff format output line. Git splits patches only for 'T' (typechange) status filepair, and there always two patches corresponding to one raw diff line. It was not used because it would tie gitweb code to minute details of git diff output. While at it, use newly introduced parsed_difftree_line wrapper subroutine in git_difftree_body. Noticed-by: Yann Dirson <ydirson@altern.org> Diagnosed-by: Petr Baudis <pasky@suse.cz> Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
17 years ago
my $to_name;
my (%from, %to);
gitweb: Use git-diff-tree patch output for commitdiff Get rid of git_diff_print invocation in git_commitdiff and therefore external diff (/usr/bin/diff) invocation, and use only git-diff-tree to generate patch. git_commitdiff and git_commitdiff_plain are collapsed into one subroutine git_commitdiff, with format (currently 'html' which is default format corresponding to git_commitdiff, and 'plain' corresponding to git_commitdiff_plain) specified in argument. Separate patch (diff) pretty-printing into git_patchset_body. It is used in git_commitdiff. Separate patch (diff) line formatting from git_diff_print into format_diff_line function. It is used in git_patchset_body. While at it, add $hash parameter to git_difftree_body, according to rule that inner functions should use parameter passing, and not global variables. CHANGES TO OUTPUT: * "commitdiff" now products patches with renaming and copying detection (git-diff-tree is invoked with -M and -C options). Empty patches (mode changes and pure renames and copying) are not written currently. Former version broke renaming and copying, and didn't notice mode changes, like this version. * "commitdiff" output is now divided into several div elements of class "log", "patchset" and "patch". * "commitdiff_plain" now only generates X-Git-Tag: line only if there is tag pointing to the current commit. Former version which wrote first tag following current commit was broken[*1*]; besides we are interested rather in tags _preceding_ the commit, and _heads_ following the commit. X-Git-Url: now is current URL; former version tried[*2*] to output URL to HTML version of commitdiff. * "commitdiff_plain" is generated by git-diff-tree, and has therefore has git specific extensions to diff format: "git diff" header and optional extended header lines. FOOTNOTES [*1*] First it generated rev-list starting from HEAD even if hash_base parameter was set, second it wasn't corrected according to changes made in git_get_references (formerly read_info_ref) output, third even for older version of read_info_ref output it didn't work for multiple tags pointing to the current commit (rare). [*2*] It wrote URL for commitdiff without hash_parent, which produces diff to first parent and is not the same as current diff if it is diff of merge commit to non-first parent. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
print "<div class=\"patchset\">\n";
# skip to first patch
while ($patch_line = <$fd>) {
chomp $patch_line;
gitweb: Use git-diff-tree patch output for commitdiff Get rid of git_diff_print invocation in git_commitdiff and therefore external diff (/usr/bin/diff) invocation, and use only git-diff-tree to generate patch. git_commitdiff and git_commitdiff_plain are collapsed into one subroutine git_commitdiff, with format (currently 'html' which is default format corresponding to git_commitdiff, and 'plain' corresponding to git_commitdiff_plain) specified in argument. Separate patch (diff) pretty-printing into git_patchset_body. It is used in git_commitdiff. Separate patch (diff) line formatting from git_diff_print into format_diff_line function. It is used in git_patchset_body. While at it, add $hash parameter to git_difftree_body, according to rule that inner functions should use parameter passing, and not global variables. CHANGES TO OUTPUT: * "commitdiff" now products patches with renaming and copying detection (git-diff-tree is invoked with -M and -C options). Empty patches (mode changes and pure renames and copying) are not written currently. Former version broke renaming and copying, and didn't notice mode changes, like this version. * "commitdiff" output is now divided into several div elements of class "log", "patchset" and "patch". * "commitdiff_plain" now only generates X-Git-Tag: line only if there is tag pointing to the current commit. Former version which wrote first tag following current commit was broken[*1*]; besides we are interested rather in tags _preceding_ the commit, and _heads_ following the commit. X-Git-Url: now is current URL; former version tried[*2*] to output URL to HTML version of commitdiff. * "commitdiff_plain" is generated by git-diff-tree, and has therefore has git specific extensions to diff format: "git diff" header and optional extended header lines. FOOTNOTES [*1*] First it generated rev-list starting from HEAD even if hash_base parameter was set, second it wasn't corrected according to changes made in git_get_references (formerly read_info_ref) output, third even for older version of read_info_ref output it didn't work for multiple tags pointing to the current commit (rare). [*2*] It wrote URL for commitdiff without hash_parent, which produces diff to first parent and is not the same as current diff if it is diff of merge commit to non-first parent. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
last if ($patch_line =~ m/^diff /);
}
PATCH:
while ($patch_line) {
gitweb: Fix and simplify "split patch" detection There are some cases when one line from "raw" git-diff output (raw format) corresponds to more than one patch in the patchset git-diff output; we call this situation "split patch". Old code misdetected subsequent patches (for different files) with the same pre-image and post-image as fragments of "split patch", leading to mislabeled from-file/to-file diff header etc. Old code used pre-image and post-image SHA-1 identifier ('from_id' and 'to_id') to check if current patch corresponds to old raw diff format line, to find if one difftree raw line coresponds to more than one patch in the patch format. Now we use post-image filename for that. This assumes that post-image filename alone can be used to identify difftree raw line. In the case this changes (which is unlikely considering current diff engine) we can add 'from_id' and 'to_id' to detect "patch splitting" together with 'to_file'. Because old code got pre-image and post-image SHA-1 identifier for the patch from the "index" line in extended diff header, diff header had to be buffered. New code takes post-image filename from "git diff" header, which is first line of a patch; this allows to simplify git_patchset_body code. A side effect of resigning diff header buffering is that there is always "diff extended_header" div, even if extended diff header is empty. Alternate solution would be to check when git splits patches, and do not check if parsed info from current patch corresponds to current or next raw diff format output line. Git splits patches only for 'T' (typechange) status filepair, and there always two patches corresponding to one raw diff line. It was not used because it would tie gitweb code to minute details of git diff output. While at it, use newly introduced parsed_difftree_line wrapper subroutine in git_difftree_body. Noticed-by: Yann Dirson <ydirson@altern.org> Diagnosed-by: Petr Baudis <pasky@suse.cz> Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
17 years ago
# parse "git diff" header line
if ($patch_line =~ m/^diff --git (\"(?:[^\\\"]*(?:\\.[^\\\"]*)*)\"|[^ "]*) (.*)$/) {
# $1 is from_name, which we do not use
$to_name = unquote($2);
$to_name =~ s!^b/!!;
} elsif ($patch_line =~ m/^diff --(cc|combined) ("?.*"?)$/) {
# $1 is 'cc' or 'combined', which we do not use
$to_name = unquote($2);
} else {
$to_name = undef;
}
# check if current patch belong to current raw line
# and parse raw git-diff line if needed
gitweb: Fix and simplify "split patch" detection There are some cases when one line from "raw" git-diff output (raw format) corresponds to more than one patch in the patchset git-diff output; we call this situation "split patch". Old code misdetected subsequent patches (for different files) with the same pre-image and post-image as fragments of "split patch", leading to mislabeled from-file/to-file diff header etc. Old code used pre-image and post-image SHA-1 identifier ('from_id' and 'to_id') to check if current patch corresponds to old raw diff format line, to find if one difftree raw line coresponds to more than one patch in the patch format. Now we use post-image filename for that. This assumes that post-image filename alone can be used to identify difftree raw line. In the case this changes (which is unlikely considering current diff engine) we can add 'from_id' and 'to_id' to detect "patch splitting" together with 'to_file'. Because old code got pre-image and post-image SHA-1 identifier for the patch from the "index" line in extended diff header, diff header had to be buffered. New code takes post-image filename from "git diff" header, which is first line of a patch; this allows to simplify git_patchset_body code. A side effect of resigning diff header buffering is that there is always "diff extended_header" div, even if extended diff header is empty. Alternate solution would be to check when git splits patches, and do not check if parsed info from current patch corresponds to current or next raw diff format output line. Git splits patches only for 'T' (typechange) status filepair, and there always two patches corresponding to one raw diff line. It was not used because it would tie gitweb code to minute details of git diff output. While at it, use newly introduced parsed_difftree_line wrapper subroutine in git_difftree_body. Noticed-by: Yann Dirson <ydirson@altern.org> Diagnosed-by: Petr Baudis <pasky@suse.cz> Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
17 years ago
if (is_patch_split($diffinfo, { 'to_file' => $to_name })) {
# this is continuation of a split patch
print "<div class=\"patch cont\">\n";
} else {
# advance raw git-diff output if needed
$patch_idx++ if defined $diffinfo;
gitweb: Use git-diff-tree patch output for commitdiff Get rid of git_diff_print invocation in git_commitdiff and therefore external diff (/usr/bin/diff) invocation, and use only git-diff-tree to generate patch. git_commitdiff and git_commitdiff_plain are collapsed into one subroutine git_commitdiff, with format (currently 'html' which is default format corresponding to git_commitdiff, and 'plain' corresponding to git_commitdiff_plain) specified in argument. Separate patch (diff) pretty-printing into git_patchset_body. It is used in git_commitdiff. Separate patch (diff) line formatting from git_diff_print into format_diff_line function. It is used in git_patchset_body. While at it, add $hash parameter to git_difftree_body, according to rule that inner functions should use parameter passing, and not global variables. CHANGES TO OUTPUT: * "commitdiff" now products patches with renaming and copying detection (git-diff-tree is invoked with -M and -C options). Empty patches (mode changes and pure renames and copying) are not written currently. Former version broke renaming and copying, and didn't notice mode changes, like this version. * "commitdiff" output is now divided into several div elements of class "log", "patchset" and "patch". * "commitdiff_plain" now only generates X-Git-Tag: line only if there is tag pointing to the current commit. Former version which wrote first tag following current commit was broken[*1*]; besides we are interested rather in tags _preceding_ the commit, and _heads_ following the commit. X-Git-Url: now is current URL; former version tried[*2*] to output URL to HTML version of commitdiff. * "commitdiff_plain" is generated by git-diff-tree, and has therefore has git specific extensions to diff format: "git diff" header and optional extended header lines. FOOTNOTES [*1*] First it generated rev-list starting from HEAD even if hash_base parameter was set, second it wasn't corrected according to changes made in git_get_references (formerly read_info_ref) output, third even for older version of read_info_ref output it didn't work for multiple tags pointing to the current commit (rare). [*2*] It wrote URL for commitdiff without hash_parent, which produces diff to first parent and is not the same as current diff if it is diff of merge commit to non-first parent. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
gitweb: Fix and simplify "split patch" detection There are some cases when one line from "raw" git-diff output (raw format) corresponds to more than one patch in the patchset git-diff output; we call this situation "split patch". Old code misdetected subsequent patches (for different files) with the same pre-image and post-image as fragments of "split patch", leading to mislabeled from-file/to-file diff header etc. Old code used pre-image and post-image SHA-1 identifier ('from_id' and 'to_id') to check if current patch corresponds to old raw diff format line, to find if one difftree raw line coresponds to more than one patch in the patch format. Now we use post-image filename for that. This assumes that post-image filename alone can be used to identify difftree raw line. In the case this changes (which is unlikely considering current diff engine) we can add 'from_id' and 'to_id' to detect "patch splitting" together with 'to_file'. Because old code got pre-image and post-image SHA-1 identifier for the patch from the "index" line in extended diff header, diff header had to be buffered. New code takes post-image filename from "git diff" header, which is first line of a patch; this allows to simplify git_patchset_body code. A side effect of resigning diff header buffering is that there is always "diff extended_header" div, even if extended diff header is empty. Alternate solution would be to check when git splits patches, and do not check if parsed info from current patch corresponds to current or next raw diff format output line. Git splits patches only for 'T' (typechange) status filepair, and there always two patches corresponding to one raw diff line. It was not used because it would tie gitweb code to minute details of git diff output. While at it, use newly introduced parsed_difftree_line wrapper subroutine in git_difftree_body. Noticed-by: Yann Dirson <ydirson@altern.org> Diagnosed-by: Petr Baudis <pasky@suse.cz> Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
17 years ago
# read and prepare patch information
$diffinfo = parsed_difftree_line($difftree->[$patch_idx]);
gitweb: Fix and simplify "split patch" detection There are some cases when one line from "raw" git-diff output (raw format) corresponds to more than one patch in the patchset git-diff output; we call this situation "split patch". Old code misdetected subsequent patches (for different files) with the same pre-image and post-image as fragments of "split patch", leading to mislabeled from-file/to-file diff header etc. Old code used pre-image and post-image SHA-1 identifier ('from_id' and 'to_id') to check if current patch corresponds to old raw diff format line, to find if one difftree raw line coresponds to more than one patch in the patch format. Now we use post-image filename for that. This assumes that post-image filename alone can be used to identify difftree raw line. In the case this changes (which is unlikely considering current diff engine) we can add 'from_id' and 'to_id' to detect "patch splitting" together with 'to_file'. Because old code got pre-image and post-image SHA-1 identifier for the patch from the "index" line in extended diff header, diff header had to be buffered. New code takes post-image filename from "git diff" header, which is first line of a patch; this allows to simplify git_patchset_body code. A side effect of resigning diff header buffering is that there is always "diff extended_header" div, even if extended diff header is empty. Alternate solution would be to check when git splits patches, and do not check if parsed info from current patch corresponds to current or next raw diff format output line. Git splits patches only for 'T' (typechange) status filepair, and there always two patches corresponding to one raw diff line. It was not used because it would tie gitweb code to minute details of git diff output. While at it, use newly introduced parsed_difftree_line wrapper subroutine in git_difftree_body. Noticed-by: Yann Dirson <ydirson@altern.org> Diagnosed-by: Petr Baudis <pasky@suse.cz> Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
17 years ago
# compact combined diff output can have some patches skipped
# find which patch (using pathname of result) we are at now;
if ($is_combined) {
while ($to_name ne $diffinfo->{'to_file'}) {
print "<div class=\"patch\" id=\"patch". ($patch_idx+1) ."\">\n" .
format_diff_cc_simplified($diffinfo, @hash_parents) .
"</div>\n"; # class="patch"
$patch_idx++;
$patch_number++;
gitweb: Fix and simplify "split patch" detection There are some cases when one line from "raw" git-diff output (raw format) corresponds to more than one patch in the patchset git-diff output; we call this situation "split patch". Old code misdetected subsequent patches (for different files) with the same pre-image and post-image as fragments of "split patch", leading to mislabeled from-file/to-file diff header etc. Old code used pre-image and post-image SHA-1 identifier ('from_id' and 'to_id') to check if current patch corresponds to old raw diff format line, to find if one difftree raw line coresponds to more than one patch in the patch format. Now we use post-image filename for that. This assumes that post-image filename alone can be used to identify difftree raw line. In the case this changes (which is unlikely considering current diff engine) we can add 'from_id' and 'to_id' to detect "patch splitting" together with 'to_file'. Because old code got pre-image and post-image SHA-1 identifier for the patch from the "index" line in extended diff header, diff header had to be buffered. New code takes post-image filename from "git diff" header, which is first line of a patch; this allows to simplify git_patchset_body code. A side effect of resigning diff header buffering is that there is always "diff extended_header" div, even if extended diff header is empty. Alternate solution would be to check when git splits patches, and do not check if parsed info from current patch corresponds to current or next raw diff format output line. Git splits patches only for 'T' (typechange) status filepair, and there always two patches corresponding to one raw diff line. It was not used because it would tie gitweb code to minute details of git diff output. While at it, use newly introduced parsed_difftree_line wrapper subroutine in git_difftree_body. Noticed-by: Yann Dirson <ydirson@altern.org> Diagnosed-by: Petr Baudis <pasky@suse.cz> Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
17 years ago
last if $patch_idx > $#$difftree;
$diffinfo = parsed_difftree_line($difftree->[$patch_idx]);
}
gitweb: Fix and simplify "split patch" detection There are some cases when one line from "raw" git-diff output (raw format) corresponds to more than one patch in the patchset git-diff output; we call this situation "split patch". Old code misdetected subsequent patches (for different files) with the same pre-image and post-image as fragments of "split patch", leading to mislabeled from-file/to-file diff header etc. Old code used pre-image and post-image SHA-1 identifier ('from_id' and 'to_id') to check if current patch corresponds to old raw diff format line, to find if one difftree raw line coresponds to more than one patch in the patch format. Now we use post-image filename for that. This assumes that post-image filename alone can be used to identify difftree raw line. In the case this changes (which is unlikely considering current diff engine) we can add 'from_id' and 'to_id' to detect "patch splitting" together with 'to_file'. Because old code got pre-image and post-image SHA-1 identifier for the patch from the "index" line in extended diff header, diff header had to be buffered. New code takes post-image filename from "git diff" header, which is first line of a patch; this allows to simplify git_patchset_body code. A side effect of resigning diff header buffering is that there is always "diff extended_header" div, even if extended diff header is empty. Alternate solution would be to check when git splits patches, and do not check if parsed info from current patch corresponds to current or next raw diff format output line. Git splits patches only for 'T' (typechange) status filepair, and there always two patches corresponding to one raw diff line. It was not used because it would tie gitweb code to minute details of git diff output. While at it, use newly introduced parsed_difftree_line wrapper subroutine in git_difftree_body. Noticed-by: Yann Dirson <ydirson@altern.org> Diagnosed-by: Petr Baudis <pasky@suse.cz> Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
17 years ago
}
# modifies %from, %to hashes
parse_from_to_diffinfo($diffinfo, \%from, \%to, @hash_parents);
# this is first patch for raw difftree line with $patch_idx index
# we index @$difftree array from 0, but number patches from 1
print "<div class=\"patch\" id=\"patch". ($patch_idx+1) ."\">\n";
}
gitweb: Use git-diff-tree patch output for commitdiff Get rid of git_diff_print invocation in git_commitdiff and therefore external diff (/usr/bin/diff) invocation, and use only git-diff-tree to generate patch. git_commitdiff and git_commitdiff_plain are collapsed into one subroutine git_commitdiff, with format (currently 'html' which is default format corresponding to git_commitdiff, and 'plain' corresponding to git_commitdiff_plain) specified in argument. Separate patch (diff) pretty-printing into git_patchset_body. It is used in git_commitdiff. Separate patch (diff) line formatting from git_diff_print into format_diff_line function. It is used in git_patchset_body. While at it, add $hash parameter to git_difftree_body, according to rule that inner functions should use parameter passing, and not global variables. CHANGES TO OUTPUT: * "commitdiff" now products patches with renaming and copying detection (git-diff-tree is invoked with -M and -C options). Empty patches (mode changes and pure renames and copying) are not written currently. Former version broke renaming and copying, and didn't notice mode changes, like this version. * "commitdiff" output is now divided into several div elements of class "log", "patchset" and "patch". * "commitdiff_plain" now only generates X-Git-Tag: line only if there is tag pointing to the current commit. Former version which wrote first tag following current commit was broken[*1*]; besides we are interested rather in tags _preceding_ the commit, and _heads_ following the commit. X-Git-Url: now is current URL; former version tried[*2*] to output URL to HTML version of commitdiff. * "commitdiff_plain" is generated by git-diff-tree, and has therefore has git specific extensions to diff format: "git diff" header and optional extended header lines. FOOTNOTES [*1*] First it generated rev-list starting from HEAD even if hash_base parameter was set, second it wasn't corrected according to changes made in git_get_references (formerly read_info_ref) output, third even for older version of read_info_ref output it didn't work for multiple tags pointing to the current commit (rare). [*2*] It wrote URL for commitdiff without hash_parent, which produces diff to first parent and is not the same as current diff if it is diff of merge commit to non-first parent. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
gitweb: Fix and simplify "split patch" detection There are some cases when one line from "raw" git-diff output (raw format) corresponds to more than one patch in the patchset git-diff output; we call this situation "split patch". Old code misdetected subsequent patches (for different files) with the same pre-image and post-image as fragments of "split patch", leading to mislabeled from-file/to-file diff header etc. Old code used pre-image and post-image SHA-1 identifier ('from_id' and 'to_id') to check if current patch corresponds to old raw diff format line, to find if one difftree raw line coresponds to more than one patch in the patch format. Now we use post-image filename for that. This assumes that post-image filename alone can be used to identify difftree raw line. In the case this changes (which is unlikely considering current diff engine) we can add 'from_id' and 'to_id' to detect "patch splitting" together with 'to_file'. Because old code got pre-image and post-image SHA-1 identifier for the patch from the "index" line in extended diff header, diff header had to be buffered. New code takes post-image filename from "git diff" header, which is first line of a patch; this allows to simplify git_patchset_body code. A side effect of resigning diff header buffering is that there is always "diff extended_header" div, even if extended diff header is empty. Alternate solution would be to check when git splits patches, and do not check if parsed info from current patch corresponds to current or next raw diff format output line. Git splits patches only for 'T' (typechange) status filepair, and there always two patches corresponding to one raw diff line. It was not used because it would tie gitweb code to minute details of git diff output. While at it, use newly introduced parsed_difftree_line wrapper subroutine in git_difftree_body. Noticed-by: Yann Dirson <ydirson@altern.org> Diagnosed-by: Petr Baudis <pasky@suse.cz> Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
17 years ago
# git diff header
#assert($patch_line =~ m/^diff /) if DEBUG;
#assert($patch_line !~ m!$/$!) if DEBUG; # is chomp-ed
$patch_number++;
# print "git diff" header
print format_git_diff_header_line($patch_line, $diffinfo,
\%from, \%to);
# print extended diff header
gitweb: Fix and simplify "split patch" detection There are some cases when one line from "raw" git-diff output (raw format) corresponds to more than one patch in the patchset git-diff output; we call this situation "split patch". Old code misdetected subsequent patches (for different files) with the same pre-image and post-image as fragments of "split patch", leading to mislabeled from-file/to-file diff header etc. Old code used pre-image and post-image SHA-1 identifier ('from_id' and 'to_id') to check if current patch corresponds to old raw diff format line, to find if one difftree raw line coresponds to more than one patch in the patch format. Now we use post-image filename for that. This assumes that post-image filename alone can be used to identify difftree raw line. In the case this changes (which is unlikely considering current diff engine) we can add 'from_id' and 'to_id' to detect "patch splitting" together with 'to_file'. Because old code got pre-image and post-image SHA-1 identifier for the patch from the "index" line in extended diff header, diff header had to be buffered. New code takes post-image filename from "git diff" header, which is first line of a patch; this allows to simplify git_patchset_body code. A side effect of resigning diff header buffering is that there is always "diff extended_header" div, even if extended diff header is empty. Alternate solution would be to check when git splits patches, and do not check if parsed info from current patch corresponds to current or next raw diff format output line. Git splits patches only for 'T' (typechange) status filepair, and there always two patches corresponding to one raw diff line. It was not used because it would tie gitweb code to minute details of git diff output. While at it, use newly introduced parsed_difftree_line wrapper subroutine in git_difftree_body. Noticed-by: Yann Dirson <ydirson@altern.org> Diagnosed-by: Petr Baudis <pasky@suse.cz> Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
17 years ago
print "<div class=\"diff extended_header\">\n";
EXTENDED_HEADER:
gitweb: Fix and simplify "split patch" detection There are some cases when one line from "raw" git-diff output (raw format) corresponds to more than one patch in the patchset git-diff output; we call this situation "split patch". Old code misdetected subsequent patches (for different files) with the same pre-image and post-image as fragments of "split patch", leading to mislabeled from-file/to-file diff header etc. Old code used pre-image and post-image SHA-1 identifier ('from_id' and 'to_id') to check if current patch corresponds to old raw diff format line, to find if one difftree raw line coresponds to more than one patch in the patch format. Now we use post-image filename for that. This assumes that post-image filename alone can be used to identify difftree raw line. In the case this changes (which is unlikely considering current diff engine) we can add 'from_id' and 'to_id' to detect "patch splitting" together with 'to_file'. Because old code got pre-image and post-image SHA-1 identifier for the patch from the "index" line in extended diff header, diff header had to be buffered. New code takes post-image filename from "git diff" header, which is first line of a patch; this allows to simplify git_patchset_body code. A side effect of resigning diff header buffering is that there is always "diff extended_header" div, even if extended diff header is empty. Alternate solution would be to check when git splits patches, and do not check if parsed info from current patch corresponds to current or next raw diff format output line. Git splits patches only for 'T' (typechange) status filepair, and there always two patches corresponding to one raw diff line. It was not used because it would tie gitweb code to minute details of git diff output. While at it, use newly introduced parsed_difftree_line wrapper subroutine in git_difftree_body. Noticed-by: Yann Dirson <ydirson@altern.org> Diagnosed-by: Petr Baudis <pasky@suse.cz> Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
17 years ago
while ($patch_line = <$fd>) {
chomp $patch_line;
last EXTENDED_HEADER if ($patch_line =~ m/^--- |^diff /);
print format_extended_diff_header_line($patch_line, $diffinfo,
\%from, \%to);
}
gitweb: Fix and simplify "split patch" detection There are some cases when one line from "raw" git-diff output (raw format) corresponds to more than one patch in the patchset git-diff output; we call this situation "split patch". Old code misdetected subsequent patches (for different files) with the same pre-image and post-image as fragments of "split patch", leading to mislabeled from-file/to-file diff header etc. Old code used pre-image and post-image SHA-1 identifier ('from_id' and 'to_id') to check if current patch corresponds to old raw diff format line, to find if one difftree raw line coresponds to more than one patch in the patch format. Now we use post-image filename for that. This assumes that post-image filename alone can be used to identify difftree raw line. In the case this changes (which is unlikely considering current diff engine) we can add 'from_id' and 'to_id' to detect "patch splitting" together with 'to_file'. Because old code got pre-image and post-image SHA-1 identifier for the patch from the "index" line in extended diff header, diff header had to be buffered. New code takes post-image filename from "git diff" header, which is first line of a patch; this allows to simplify git_patchset_body code. A side effect of resigning diff header buffering is that there is always "diff extended_header" div, even if extended diff header is empty. Alternate solution would be to check when git splits patches, and do not check if parsed info from current patch corresponds to current or next raw diff format output line. Git splits patches only for 'T' (typechange) status filepair, and there always two patches corresponding to one raw diff line. It was not used because it would tie gitweb code to minute details of git diff output. While at it, use newly introduced parsed_difftree_line wrapper subroutine in git_difftree_body. Noticed-by: Yann Dirson <ydirson@altern.org> Diagnosed-by: Petr Baudis <pasky@suse.cz> Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
17 years ago
print "</div>\n"; # class="diff extended_header"
# from-file/to-file diff header
if (! $patch_line) {
print "</div>\n"; # class="patch"
last PATCH;
}
next PATCH if ($patch_line =~ m/^diff /);
#assert($patch_line =~ m/^---/) if DEBUG;
gitweb: Fix and simplify "split patch" detection There are some cases when one line from "raw" git-diff output (raw format) corresponds to more than one patch in the patchset git-diff output; we call this situation "split patch". Old code misdetected subsequent patches (for different files) with the same pre-image and post-image as fragments of "split patch", leading to mislabeled from-file/to-file diff header etc. Old code used pre-image and post-image SHA-1 identifier ('from_id' and 'to_id') to check if current patch corresponds to old raw diff format line, to find if one difftree raw line coresponds to more than one patch in the patch format. Now we use post-image filename for that. This assumes that post-image filename alone can be used to identify difftree raw line. In the case this changes (which is unlikely considering current diff engine) we can add 'from_id' and 'to_id' to detect "patch splitting" together with 'to_file'. Because old code got pre-image and post-image SHA-1 identifier for the patch from the "index" line in extended diff header, diff header had to be buffered. New code takes post-image filename from "git diff" header, which is first line of a patch; this allows to simplify git_patchset_body code. A side effect of resigning diff header buffering is that there is always "diff extended_header" div, even if extended diff header is empty. Alternate solution would be to check when git splits patches, and do not check if parsed info from current patch corresponds to current or next raw diff format output line. Git splits patches only for 'T' (typechange) status filepair, and there always two patches corresponding to one raw diff line. It was not used because it would tie gitweb code to minute details of git diff output. While at it, use newly introduced parsed_difftree_line wrapper subroutine in git_difftree_body. Noticed-by: Yann Dirson <ydirson@altern.org> Diagnosed-by: Petr Baudis <pasky@suse.cz> Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
17 years ago
my $last_patch_line = $patch_line;
$patch_line = <$fd>;
chomp $patch_line;
#assert($patch_line =~ m/^\+\+\+/) if DEBUG;
print format_diff_from_to_header($last_patch_line, $patch_line,
$diffinfo, \%from, \%to,
@hash_parents);
# the patch itself
LINE:
while ($patch_line = <$fd>) {
chomp $patch_line;
next PATCH if ($patch_line =~ m/^diff /);
print format_diff_line($patch_line, \%from, \%to);
gitweb: Use git-diff-tree patch output for commitdiff Get rid of git_diff_print invocation in git_commitdiff and therefore external diff (/usr/bin/diff) invocation, and use only git-diff-tree to generate patch. git_commitdiff and git_commitdiff_plain are collapsed into one subroutine git_commitdiff, with format (currently 'html' which is default format corresponding to git_commitdiff, and 'plain' corresponding to git_commitdiff_plain) specified in argument. Separate patch (diff) pretty-printing into git_patchset_body. It is used in git_commitdiff. Separate patch (diff) line formatting from git_diff_print into format_diff_line function. It is used in git_patchset_body. While at it, add $hash parameter to git_difftree_body, according to rule that inner functions should use parameter passing, and not global variables. CHANGES TO OUTPUT: * "commitdiff" now products patches with renaming and copying detection (git-diff-tree is invoked with -M and -C options). Empty patches (mode changes and pure renames and copying) are not written currently. Former version broke renaming and copying, and didn't notice mode changes, like this version. * "commitdiff" output is now divided into several div elements of class "log", "patchset" and "patch". * "commitdiff_plain" now only generates X-Git-Tag: line only if there is tag pointing to the current commit. Former version which wrote first tag following current commit was broken[*1*]; besides we are interested rather in tags _preceding_ the commit, and _heads_ following the commit. X-Git-Url: now is current URL; former version tried[*2*] to output URL to HTML version of commitdiff. * "commitdiff_plain" is generated by git-diff-tree, and has therefore has git specific extensions to diff format: "git diff" header and optional extended header lines. FOOTNOTES [*1*] First it generated rev-list starting from HEAD even if hash_base parameter was set, second it wasn't corrected according to changes made in git_get_references (formerly read_info_ref) output, third even for older version of read_info_ref output it didn't work for multiple tags pointing to the current commit (rare). [*2*] It wrote URL for commitdiff without hash_parent, which produces diff to first parent and is not the same as current diff if it is diff of merge commit to non-first parent. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
}
} continue {
print "</div>\n"; # class="patch"
gitweb: Use git-diff-tree patch output for commitdiff Get rid of git_diff_print invocation in git_commitdiff and therefore external diff (/usr/bin/diff) invocation, and use only git-diff-tree to generate patch. git_commitdiff and git_commitdiff_plain are collapsed into one subroutine git_commitdiff, with format (currently 'html' which is default format corresponding to git_commitdiff, and 'plain' corresponding to git_commitdiff_plain) specified in argument. Separate patch (diff) pretty-printing into git_patchset_body. It is used in git_commitdiff. Separate patch (diff) line formatting from git_diff_print into format_diff_line function. It is used in git_patchset_body. While at it, add $hash parameter to git_difftree_body, according to rule that inner functions should use parameter passing, and not global variables. CHANGES TO OUTPUT: * "commitdiff" now products patches with renaming and copying detection (git-diff-tree is invoked with -M and -C options). Empty patches (mode changes and pure renames and copying) are not written currently. Former version broke renaming and copying, and didn't notice mode changes, like this version. * "commitdiff" output is now divided into several div elements of class "log", "patchset" and "patch". * "commitdiff_plain" now only generates X-Git-Tag: line only if there is tag pointing to the current commit. Former version which wrote first tag following current commit was broken[*1*]; besides we are interested rather in tags _preceding_ the commit, and _heads_ following the commit. X-Git-Url: now is current URL; former version tried[*2*] to output URL to HTML version of commitdiff. * "commitdiff_plain" is generated by git-diff-tree, and has therefore has git specific extensions to diff format: "git diff" header and optional extended header lines. FOOTNOTES [*1*] First it generated rev-list starting from HEAD even if hash_base parameter was set, second it wasn't corrected according to changes made in git_get_references (formerly read_info_ref) output, third even for older version of read_info_ref output it didn't work for multiple tags pointing to the current commit (rare). [*2*] It wrote URL for commitdiff without hash_parent, which produces diff to first parent and is not the same as current diff if it is diff of merge commit to non-first parent. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
}
# for compact combined (--cc) format, with chunk and patch simpliciaction
# patchset might be empty, but there might be unprocessed raw lines
gitweb: Fix and simplify "split patch" detection There are some cases when one line from "raw" git-diff output (raw format) corresponds to more than one patch in the patchset git-diff output; we call this situation "split patch". Old code misdetected subsequent patches (for different files) with the same pre-image and post-image as fragments of "split patch", leading to mislabeled from-file/to-file diff header etc. Old code used pre-image and post-image SHA-1 identifier ('from_id' and 'to_id') to check if current patch corresponds to old raw diff format line, to find if one difftree raw line coresponds to more than one patch in the patch format. Now we use post-image filename for that. This assumes that post-image filename alone can be used to identify difftree raw line. In the case this changes (which is unlikely considering current diff engine) we can add 'from_id' and 'to_id' to detect "patch splitting" together with 'to_file'. Because old code got pre-image and post-image SHA-1 identifier for the patch from the "index" line in extended diff header, diff header had to be buffered. New code takes post-image filename from "git diff" header, which is first line of a patch; this allows to simplify git_patchset_body code. A side effect of resigning diff header buffering is that there is always "diff extended_header" div, even if extended diff header is empty. Alternate solution would be to check when git splits patches, and do not check if parsed info from current patch corresponds to current or next raw diff format output line. Git splits patches only for 'T' (typechange) status filepair, and there always two patches corresponding to one raw diff line. It was not used because it would tie gitweb code to minute details of git diff output. While at it, use newly introduced parsed_difftree_line wrapper subroutine in git_difftree_body. Noticed-by: Yann Dirson <ydirson@altern.org> Diagnosed-by: Petr Baudis <pasky@suse.cz> Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
17 years ago
for (++$patch_idx if $patch_number > 0;
$patch_idx < @$difftree;
gitweb: Fix and simplify "split patch" detection There are some cases when one line from "raw" git-diff output (raw format) corresponds to more than one patch in the patchset git-diff output; we call this situation "split patch". Old code misdetected subsequent patches (for different files) with the same pre-image and post-image as fragments of "split patch", leading to mislabeled from-file/to-file diff header etc. Old code used pre-image and post-image SHA-1 identifier ('from_id' and 'to_id') to check if current patch corresponds to old raw diff format line, to find if one difftree raw line coresponds to more than one patch in the patch format. Now we use post-image filename for that. This assumes that post-image filename alone can be used to identify difftree raw line. In the case this changes (which is unlikely considering current diff engine) we can add 'from_id' and 'to_id' to detect "patch splitting" together with 'to_file'. Because old code got pre-image and post-image SHA-1 identifier for the patch from the "index" line in extended diff header, diff header had to be buffered. New code takes post-image filename from "git diff" header, which is first line of a patch; this allows to simplify git_patchset_body code. A side effect of resigning diff header buffering is that there is always "diff extended_header" div, even if extended diff header is empty. Alternate solution would be to check when git splits patches, and do not check if parsed info from current patch corresponds to current or next raw diff format output line. Git splits patches only for 'T' (typechange) status filepair, and there always two patches corresponding to one raw diff line. It was not used because it would tie gitweb code to minute details of git diff output. While at it, use newly introduced parsed_difftree_line wrapper subroutine in git_difftree_body. Noticed-by: Yann Dirson <ydirson@altern.org> Diagnosed-by: Petr Baudis <pasky@suse.cz> Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
17 years ago
++$patch_idx) {
# read and prepare patch information
gitweb: Fix and simplify "split patch" detection There are some cases when one line from "raw" git-diff output (raw format) corresponds to more than one patch in the patchset git-diff output; we call this situation "split patch". Old code misdetected subsequent patches (for different files) with the same pre-image and post-image as fragments of "split patch", leading to mislabeled from-file/to-file diff header etc. Old code used pre-image and post-image SHA-1 identifier ('from_id' and 'to_id') to check if current patch corresponds to old raw diff format line, to find if one difftree raw line coresponds to more than one patch in the patch format. Now we use post-image filename for that. This assumes that post-image filename alone can be used to identify difftree raw line. In the case this changes (which is unlikely considering current diff engine) we can add 'from_id' and 'to_id' to detect "patch splitting" together with 'to_file'. Because old code got pre-image and post-image SHA-1 identifier for the patch from the "index" line in extended diff header, diff header had to be buffered. New code takes post-image filename from "git diff" header, which is first line of a patch; this allows to simplify git_patchset_body code. A side effect of resigning diff header buffering is that there is always "diff extended_header" div, even if extended diff header is empty. Alternate solution would be to check when git splits patches, and do not check if parsed info from current patch corresponds to current or next raw diff format output line. Git splits patches only for 'T' (typechange) status filepair, and there always two patches corresponding to one raw diff line. It was not used because it would tie gitweb code to minute details of git diff output. While at it, use newly introduced parsed_difftree_line wrapper subroutine in git_difftree_body. Noticed-by: Yann Dirson <ydirson@altern.org> Diagnosed-by: Petr Baudis <pasky@suse.cz> Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
17 years ago
$diffinfo = parsed_difftree_line($difftree->[$patch_idx]);
# generate anchor for "patch" links in difftree / whatchanged part
print "<div class=\"patch\" id=\"patch". ($patch_idx+1) ."\">\n" .
format_diff_cc_simplified($diffinfo, @hash_parents) .
"</div>\n"; # class="patch"
$patch_number++;
}
if ($patch_number == 0) {
if (@hash_parents > 1) {
print "<div class=\"diff nodifferences\">Trivial merge</div>\n";
} else {
print "<div class=\"diff nodifferences\">No differences found</div>\n";
}
}
gitweb: Use git-diff-tree patch output for commitdiff Get rid of git_diff_print invocation in git_commitdiff and therefore external diff (/usr/bin/diff) invocation, and use only git-diff-tree to generate patch. git_commitdiff and git_commitdiff_plain are collapsed into one subroutine git_commitdiff, with format (currently 'html' which is default format corresponding to git_commitdiff, and 'plain' corresponding to git_commitdiff_plain) specified in argument. Separate patch (diff) pretty-printing into git_patchset_body. It is used in git_commitdiff. Separate patch (diff) line formatting from git_diff_print into format_diff_line function. It is used in git_patchset_body. While at it, add $hash parameter to git_difftree_body, according to rule that inner functions should use parameter passing, and not global variables. CHANGES TO OUTPUT: * "commitdiff" now products patches with renaming and copying detection (git-diff-tree is invoked with -M and -C options). Empty patches (mode changes and pure renames and copying) are not written currently. Former version broke renaming and copying, and didn't notice mode changes, like this version. * "commitdiff" output is now divided into several div elements of class "log", "patchset" and "patch". * "commitdiff_plain" now only generates X-Git-Tag: line only if there is tag pointing to the current commit. Former version which wrote first tag following current commit was broken[*1*]; besides we are interested rather in tags _preceding_ the commit, and _heads_ following the commit. X-Git-Url: now is current URL; former version tried[*2*] to output URL to HTML version of commitdiff. * "commitdiff_plain" is generated by git-diff-tree, and has therefore has git specific extensions to diff format: "git diff" header and optional extended header lines. FOOTNOTES [*1*] First it generated rev-list starting from HEAD even if hash_base parameter was set, second it wasn't corrected according to changes made in git_get_references (formerly read_info_ref) output, third even for older version of read_info_ref output it didn't work for multiple tags pointing to the current commit (rare). [*2*] It wrote URL for commitdiff without hash_parent, which produces diff to first parent and is not the same as current diff if it is diff of merge commit to non-first parent. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
print "</div>\n"; # class="patchset"
}
# . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
# fills project list info (age, description, owner, forks) for each
# project in the list, removing invalid projects from returned list
# NOTE: modifies $projlist, but does not remove entries from it
sub fill_project_list_info {
my ($projlist, $check_forks) = @_;
my @projects;
my $show_ctags = gitweb_check_feature('ctags');
PROJECT:
foreach my $pr (@$projlist) {
my (@activity) = git_get_last_activity($pr->{'path'});
unless (@activity) {
next PROJECT;
}
($pr->{'age'}, $pr->{'age_string'}) = @activity;
if (!defined $pr->{'descr'}) {
my $descr = git_get_project_description($pr->{'path'}) || "";
$descr = to_utf8($descr);
$pr->{'descr_long'} = $descr;
$pr->{'descr'} = chop_str($descr, $projects_list_description_width, 5);
}
if (!defined $pr->{'owner'}) {
$pr->{'owner'} = git_get_project_owner("$pr->{'path'}") || "";
}
if ($check_forks) {
my $pname = $pr->{'path'};
if (($pname =~ s/\.git$//) &&
($pname !~ /\/$/) &&
(-d "$projectroot/$pname")) {
$pr->{'forks'} = "-d $projectroot/$pname";
} else {
$pr->{'forks'} = 0;
}
}
$show_ctags and $pr->{'ctags'} = git_get_project_ctags($pr->{'path'});
push @projects, $pr;
}
return @projects;
}
# print 'sort by' <th> element, generating 'sort by $name' replay link
# if that order is not selected
sub print_sort_th {
my ($name, $order, $header) = @_;
$header ||= ucfirst($name);
if ($order eq $name) {
print "<th>$header</th>\n";
} else {
print "<th>" .
$cgi->a({-href => href(-replay=>1, order=>$name),
-class => "header"}, $header) .
"</th>\n";
}
}
sub git_project_list_body {
# actually uses global variable $project
my ($projlist, $order, $from, $to, $extra, $no_header) = @_;
my $check_forks = gitweb_check_feature('forks');
my @projects = fill_project_list_info($projlist, $check_forks);
$order ||= $default_projects_order;
$from = 0 unless defined $from;
$to = $#projects if (!defined $to || $#projects < $to);
my %order_info = (
project => { key => 'path', type => 'str' },
descr => { key => 'descr_long', type => 'str' },
owner => { key => 'owner', type => 'str' },
age => { key => 'age', type => 'num' }
);
my $oi = $order_info{$order};
if ($oi->{'type'} eq 'str') {
@projects = sort {$a->{$oi->{'key'}} cmp $b->{$oi->{'key'}}} @projects;
} else {
@projects = sort {$a->{$oi->{'key'}} <=> $b->{$oi->{'key'}}} @projects;
}
my $show_ctags = gitweb_check_feature('ctags');
if ($show_ctags) {
my %ctags;
foreach my $p (@projects) {
foreach my $ct (keys %{$p->{'ctags'}}) {
$ctags{$ct} += $p->{'ctags'}->{$ct};
}
}
my $cloud = git_populate_project_tagcloud(\%ctags);
print git_show_project_tagcloud($cloud, 64);
}
print "<table class=\"project_list\">\n";
unless ($no_header) {
print "<tr>\n";
if ($check_forks) {
print "<th></th>\n";
}
print_sort_th('project', $order, 'Project');
print_sort_th('descr', $order, 'Description');
print_sort_th('owner', $order, 'Owner');
print_sort_th('age', $order, 'Last Change');
print "<th></th>\n" . # for links
"</tr>\n";
}
my $alternate = 1;
my $tagfilter = $cgi->param('by_tag');
for (my $i = $from; $i <= $to; $i++) {
my $pr = $projects[$i];
next if $tagfilter and $show_ctags and not grep { lc $_ eq lc $tagfilter } keys %{$pr->{'ctags'}};
next if $searchtext and not $pr->{'path'} =~ /$searchtext/
and not $pr->{'descr_long'} =~ /$searchtext/;
# Weed out forks or non-matching entries of search
if ($check_forks) {
my $forkbase = $project; $forkbase ||= ''; $forkbase =~ s#\.git$#/#;
$forkbase="^$forkbase" if $forkbase;
next if not $searchtext and not $tagfilter and $show_ctags
and $pr->{'path'} =~ m#$forkbase.*/.*#; # regexp-safe
}
if ($alternate) {
print "<tr class=\"dark\">\n";
} else {
print "<tr class=\"light\">\n";
}
$alternate ^= 1;
if ($check_forks) {
print "<td>";
if ($pr->{'forks'}) {
print "<!-- $pr->{'forks'} -->\n";
print $cgi->a({-href => href(project=>$pr->{'path'}, action=>"forks")}, "+");
}
print "</td>\n";
}
print "<td>" . $cgi->a({-href => href(project=>$pr->{'path'}, action=>"summary"),
-class => "list"}, esc_html($pr->{'path'})) . "</td>\n" .
"<td>" . $cgi->a({-href => href(project=>$pr->{'path'}, action=>"summary"),
-class => "list", -title => $pr->{'descr_long'}},
esc_html($pr->{'descr'})) . "</td>\n" .
"<td><i>" . chop_and_escape_str($pr->{'owner'}, 15) . "</i></td>\n";
print "<td class=\"". age_class($pr->{'age'}) . "\">" .
(defined $pr->{'age_string'} ? $pr->{'age_string'} : "No commits") . "</td>\n" .
"<td class=\"link\">" .
$cgi->a({-href => href(project=>$pr->{'path'}, action=>"summary")}, "summary") . " | " .
$cgi->a({-href => href(project=>$pr->{'path'}, action=>"shortlog")}, "shortlog") . " | " .
$cgi->a({-href => href(project=>$pr->{'path'}, action=>"log")}, "log") . " | " .
$cgi->a({-href => href(project=>$pr->{'path'}, action=>"tree")}, "tree") .
($pr->{'forks'} ? " | " . $cgi->a({-href => href(project=>$pr->{'path'}, action=>"forks")}, "forks") : '') .
"</td>\n" .
"</tr>\n";
}
if (defined $extra) {
print "<tr>\n";
if ($check_forks) {
print "<td></td>\n";
}
print "<td colspan=\"5\">$extra</td>\n" .
"</tr>\n";
}
print "</table>\n";
}
sub git_shortlog_body {
# uses global variable $project
my ($commitlist, $from, $to, $refs, $extra) = @_;
$from = 0 unless defined $from;
$to = $#{$commitlist} if (!defined $to || $#{$commitlist} < $to);
print "<table class=\"shortlog\">\n";
my $alternate = 1;
for (my $i = $from; $i <= $to; $i++) {
my %co = %{$commitlist->[$i]};
my $commit = $co{'id'};
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
my $ref = format_ref_marker($refs, $commit);
if ($alternate) {
print "<tr class=\"dark\">\n";
} else {
print "<tr class=\"light\">\n";
}
$alternate ^= 1;
my $author = chop_and_escape_str($co{'author_name'}, 10);
# git_summary() used print "<td><i>$co{'age_string'}</i></td>\n" .
print "<td title=\"$co{'age_string_age'}\"><i>$co{'age_string_date'}</i></td>\n" .
"<td><i>" . $author . "</i></td>\n" .
"<td>";
print format_subject_html($co{'title'}, $co{'title_short'},
href(action=>"commit", hash=>$commit), $ref);
print "</td>\n" .
"<td class=\"link\">" .
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"commit", hash=>$commit)}, "commit") . " | " .
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"commitdiff", hash=>$commit)}, "commitdiff") . " | " .
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"tree", hash=>$commit, hash_base=>$commit)}, "tree");
gitweb: snapshot cleanups & support for offering multiple formats - Centralize knowledge about snapshot formats (mime types, extensions, commands) in %known_snapshot_formats and improve how some of that information is specified. In particular, zip files are no longer a special case. - Add support for offering multiple snapshot formats to the user so that he/she can download a snapshot in the format he/she prefers. The site-wide or project configuration now gives a list of formats to offer, and if more than one format is offered, the "_snapshot_" link becomes something like "snapshot (_tar.bz2_ _zip_)". - If only one format is offered, a tooltip on the "_snapshot_" link tells the user what it is. - Fix out-of-date "tarball" -> "archive" in comment. Alert for gitweb site administrators: This patch changes the format of $feature{'snapshot'}{'default'} in gitweb_config.perl from a list of three pieces of information about a single format to a list of one or more formats you wish to offer from the set ('tgz', 'tbz2', 'zip'). Update your gitweb_config.perl appropriately. There was taken care for old-style gitweb configuration to work as it used to, but this backward compatibility works only for the values which correspond to gitweb.snapshot values of 'gzip', 'bzip2' and 'zip', i.e. ['x-gzip', 'gz', 'gzip'] ['x-bzip2', 'bz2', 'bzip2'] ['x-zip', 'zip', ''] The preferred names for gitweb.snapshot in repository configuration have also changed from 'gzip' and 'bzip2' to 'tgz' and 'tbz2', but the old names are still recognized for compatibility. Signed-off-by: Matt McCutchen <hashproduct@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
18 years ago
my $snapshot_links = format_snapshot_links($commit);
if (defined $snapshot_links) {
print " | " . $snapshot_links;
}
print "</td>\n" .
"</tr>\n";
}
if (defined $extra) {
print "<tr>\n" .
"<td colspan=\"4\">$extra</td>\n" .
"</tr>\n";
}
print "</table>\n";
}
sub git_history_body {
# Warning: assumes constant type (blob or tree) during history
my ($commitlist, $from, $to, $refs, $hash_base, $ftype, $extra) = @_;
$from = 0 unless defined $from;
$to = $#{$commitlist} unless (defined $to && $to <= $#{$commitlist});
print "<table class=\"history\">\n";
my $alternate = 1;
for (my $i = $from; $i <= $to; $i++) {
my %co = %{$commitlist->[$i]};
if (!%co) {
next;
}
my $commit = $co{'id'};
my $ref = format_ref_marker($refs, $commit);
if ($alternate) {
print "<tr class=\"dark\">\n";
} else {
print "<tr class=\"light\">\n";
}
$alternate ^= 1;
# shortlog uses chop_str($co{'author_name'}, 10)
my $author = chop_and_escape_str($co{'author_name'}, 15, 3);
print "<td title=\"$co{'age_string_age'}\"><i>$co{'age_string_date'}</i></td>\n" .
"<td><i>" . $author . "</i></td>\n" .
"<td>";
# originally git_history used chop_str($co{'title'}, 50)
print format_subject_html($co{'title'}, $co{'title_short'},
href(action=>"commit", hash=>$commit), $ref);
print "</td>\n" .
"<td class=\"link\">" .
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>$ftype, hash_base=>$commit, file_name=>$file_name)}, $ftype) . " | " .
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"commitdiff", hash=>$commit)}, "commitdiff");
if ($ftype eq 'blob') {
my $blob_current = git_get_hash_by_path($hash_base, $file_name);
my $blob_parent = git_get_hash_by_path($commit, $file_name);
if (defined $blob_current && defined $blob_parent &&
$blob_current ne $blob_parent) {
print " | " .
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"blobdiff",
hash=>$blob_current, hash_parent=>$blob_parent,
hash_base=>$hash_base, hash_parent_base=>$commit,
file_name=>$file_name)},
"diff to current");
}
}
print "</td>\n" .
"</tr>\n";
}
if (defined $extra) {
print "<tr>\n" .
"<td colspan=\"4\">$extra</td>\n" .
"</tr>\n";
}
print "</table>\n";
}
sub git_tags_body {
# uses global variable $project
my ($taglist, $from, $to, $extra) = @_;
$from = 0 unless defined $from;
$to = $#{$taglist} if (!defined $to || $#{$taglist} < $to);
print "<table class=\"tags\">\n";
my $alternate = 1;
for (my $i = $from; $i <= $to; $i++) {
my $entry = $taglist->[$i];
my %tag = %$entry;
gitweb: Use git-for-each-ref to generate list of heads and/or tags Add two subroutines: git_get_heads_list and git_get_refs_list, which fill out needed parts of refs info (heads and tags respectively) info using single call to git-for-each-ref, instead of using git-peek-remote to get list of references and using parse_ref for each ref to get ref info, which in turn uses at least one call of git command. Replace call to git_get_refs_list in git_summary by call to git_get_references, git_get_heads_list and git_get_tags_list (simplifying this subroutine a bit). Use git_get_heads_list in git_heads and git_get_tags_list in git_tags. Modify git_tags_body slightly to accept output from git_get_tags_list. Remove no longer used, and a bit hackish, git_get_refs_list. parse_ref is no longer used, but is left for now. Generating "summary" and "tags" views should be much faster for projects which have large number of tags. CHANGES IN OUTPUT: Before, if ref in refs/tags was tag pointing to commit we used committer epoch as epoch for ref, and used tagger epoch as epoch only for tag pointing to object of other type. If ref in refs/tags was commit, we used committer epoch as epoch for ref (see parse_ref; we sorted in gitweb by 'epoch' field). Currently we use committer epoch for refs pointing to commit objects, and tagger epoch for refs pointing to tag object, even if tag points to commit. Simple ab benchmark before and after this patch for my git.git repository (git/jnareb-git.git) with some heads and tags added as compared to git.git repository, shows around 2.4-3.0 times speedup for "summary" and "tags" views: summary 3134 +/- 24.2 ms --> 1081 +/- 30.2 ms tags 2886 +/- 18.9 ms --> 1196 +/- 15.6 ms Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
my $comment = $tag{'subject'};
my $comment_short;
if (defined $comment) {
$comment_short = chop_str($comment, 30, 5);
}
if ($alternate) {
print "<tr class=\"dark\">\n";
} else {
print "<tr class=\"light\">\n";
}
$alternate ^= 1;
if (defined $tag{'age'}) {
print "<td><i>$tag{'age'}</i></td>\n";
} else {
print "<td></td>\n";
}
print "<td>" .
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>$tag{'reftype'}, hash=>$tag{'refid'}),
-class => "list name"}, esc_html($tag{'name'})) .
"</td>\n" .
"<td>";
if (defined $comment) {
print format_subject_html($comment, $comment_short,
href(action=>"tag", hash=>$tag{'id'}));
}
print "</td>\n" .
"<td class=\"selflink\">";
if ($tag{'type'} eq "tag") {
print $cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"tag", hash=>$tag{'id'})}, "tag");
} else {
print "&nbsp;";
}
print "</td>\n" .
"<td class=\"link\">" . " | " .
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>$tag{'reftype'}, hash=>$tag{'refid'})}, $tag{'reftype'});
if ($tag{'reftype'} eq "commit") {
print " | " . $cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"shortlog", hash=>$tag{'fullname'})}, "shortlog") .
" | " . $cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"log", hash=>$tag{'fullname'})}, "log");
} elsif ($tag{'reftype'} eq "blob") {
print " | " . $cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"blob_plain", hash=>$tag{'refid'})}, "raw");
}
print "</td>\n" .
"</tr>";
}
if (defined $extra) {
print "<tr>\n" .
"<td colspan=\"5\">$extra</td>\n" .
"</tr>\n";
}
print "</table>\n";
}
sub git_heads_body {
# uses global variable $project
my ($headlist, $head, $from, $to, $extra) = @_;
$from = 0 unless defined $from;
$to = $#{$headlist} if (!defined $to || $#{$headlist} < $to);
print "<table class=\"heads\">\n";
my $alternate = 1;
for (my $i = $from; $i <= $to; $i++) {
my $entry = $headlist->[$i];
gitweb: Use git-for-each-ref to generate list of heads and/or tags Add two subroutines: git_get_heads_list and git_get_refs_list, which fill out needed parts of refs info (heads and tags respectively) info using single call to git-for-each-ref, instead of using git-peek-remote to get list of references and using parse_ref for each ref to get ref info, which in turn uses at least one call of git command. Replace call to git_get_refs_list in git_summary by call to git_get_references, git_get_heads_list and git_get_tags_list (simplifying this subroutine a bit). Use git_get_heads_list in git_heads and git_get_tags_list in git_tags. Modify git_tags_body slightly to accept output from git_get_tags_list. Remove no longer used, and a bit hackish, git_get_refs_list. parse_ref is no longer used, but is left for now. Generating "summary" and "tags" views should be much faster for projects which have large number of tags. CHANGES IN OUTPUT: Before, if ref in refs/tags was tag pointing to commit we used committer epoch as epoch for ref, and used tagger epoch as epoch only for tag pointing to object of other type. If ref in refs/tags was commit, we used committer epoch as epoch for ref (see parse_ref; we sorted in gitweb by 'epoch' field). Currently we use committer epoch for refs pointing to commit objects, and tagger epoch for refs pointing to tag object, even if tag points to commit. Simple ab benchmark before and after this patch for my git.git repository (git/jnareb-git.git) with some heads and tags added as compared to git.git repository, shows around 2.4-3.0 times speedup for "summary" and "tags" views: summary 3134 +/- 24.2 ms --> 1081 +/- 30.2 ms tags 2886 +/- 18.9 ms --> 1196 +/- 15.6 ms Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
my %ref = %$entry;
my $curr = $ref{'id'} eq $head;
if ($alternate) {
print "<tr class=\"dark\">\n";
} else {
print "<tr class=\"light\">\n";
}
$alternate ^= 1;
gitweb: Use git-for-each-ref to generate list of heads and/or tags Add two subroutines: git_get_heads_list and git_get_refs_list, which fill out needed parts of refs info (heads and tags respectively) info using single call to git-for-each-ref, instead of using git-peek-remote to get list of references and using parse_ref for each ref to get ref info, which in turn uses at least one call of git command. Replace call to git_get_refs_list in git_summary by call to git_get_references, git_get_heads_list and git_get_tags_list (simplifying this subroutine a bit). Use git_get_heads_list in git_heads and git_get_tags_list in git_tags. Modify git_tags_body slightly to accept output from git_get_tags_list. Remove no longer used, and a bit hackish, git_get_refs_list. parse_ref is no longer used, but is left for now. Generating "summary" and "tags" views should be much faster for projects which have large number of tags. CHANGES IN OUTPUT: Before, if ref in refs/tags was tag pointing to commit we used committer epoch as epoch for ref, and used tagger epoch as epoch only for tag pointing to object of other type. If ref in refs/tags was commit, we used committer epoch as epoch for ref (see parse_ref; we sorted in gitweb by 'epoch' field). Currently we use committer epoch for refs pointing to commit objects, and tagger epoch for refs pointing to tag object, even if tag points to commit. Simple ab benchmark before and after this patch for my git.git repository (git/jnareb-git.git) with some heads and tags added as compared to git.git repository, shows around 2.4-3.0 times speedup for "summary" and "tags" views: summary 3134 +/- 24.2 ms --> 1081 +/- 30.2 ms tags 2886 +/- 18.9 ms --> 1196 +/- 15.6 ms Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
print "<td><i>$ref{'age'}</i></td>\n" .
($curr ? "<td class=\"current_head\">" : "<td>") .
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"shortlog", hash=>$ref{'fullname'}),
gitweb: Use git-for-each-ref to generate list of heads and/or tags Add two subroutines: git_get_heads_list and git_get_refs_list, which fill out needed parts of refs info (heads and tags respectively) info using single call to git-for-each-ref, instead of using git-peek-remote to get list of references and using parse_ref for each ref to get ref info, which in turn uses at least one call of git command. Replace call to git_get_refs_list in git_summary by call to git_get_references, git_get_heads_list and git_get_tags_list (simplifying this subroutine a bit). Use git_get_heads_list in git_heads and git_get_tags_list in git_tags. Modify git_tags_body slightly to accept output from git_get_tags_list. Remove no longer used, and a bit hackish, git_get_refs_list. parse_ref is no longer used, but is left for now. Generating "summary" and "tags" views should be much faster for projects which have large number of tags. CHANGES IN OUTPUT: Before, if ref in refs/tags was tag pointing to commit we used committer epoch as epoch for ref, and used tagger epoch as epoch only for tag pointing to object of other type. If ref in refs/tags was commit, we used committer epoch as epoch for ref (see parse_ref; we sorted in gitweb by 'epoch' field). Currently we use committer epoch for refs pointing to commit objects, and tagger epoch for refs pointing to tag object, even if tag points to commit. Simple ab benchmark before and after this patch for my git.git repository (git/jnareb-git.git) with some heads and tags added as compared to git.git repository, shows around 2.4-3.0 times speedup for "summary" and "tags" views: summary 3134 +/- 24.2 ms --> 1081 +/- 30.2 ms tags 2886 +/- 18.9 ms --> 1196 +/- 15.6 ms Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
-class => "list name"},esc_html($ref{'name'})) .
"</td>\n" .
"<td class=\"link\">" .
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"shortlog", hash=>$ref{'fullname'})}, "shortlog") . " | " .
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"log", hash=>$ref{'fullname'})}, "log") . " | " .
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"tree", hash=>$ref{'fullname'}, hash_base=>$ref{'name'})}, "tree") .
"</td>\n" .
"</tr>";
}
if (defined $extra) {
print "<tr>\n" .
"<td colspan=\"3\">$extra</td>\n" .
"</tr>\n";
}
print "</table>\n";
}
sub git_search_grep_body {
my ($commitlist, $from, $to, $extra) = @_;
$from = 0 unless defined $from;
$to = $#{$commitlist} if (!defined $to || $#{$commitlist} < $to);
print "<table class=\"commit_search\">\n";
my $alternate = 1;
for (my $i = $from; $i <= $to; $i++) {
my %co = %{$commitlist->[$i]};
if (!%co) {
next;
}
my $commit = $co{'id'};
if ($alternate) {
print "<tr class=\"dark\">\n";
} else {
print "<tr class=\"light\">\n";
}
$alternate ^= 1;
my $author = chop_and_escape_str($co{'author_name'}, 15, 5);
print "<td title=\"$co{'age_string_age'}\"><i>$co{'age_string_date'}</i></td>\n" .
"<td><i>" . $author . "</i></td>\n" .
"<td>" .
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"commit", hash=>$co{'id'}),
-class => "list subject"},
chop_and_escape_str($co{'title'}, 50) . "<br/>");
my $comment = $co{'comment'};
foreach my $line (@$comment) {
if ($line =~ m/^(.*?)($search_regexp)(.*)$/i) {
my ($lead, $match, $trail) = ($1, $2, $3);
gitweb: Better cutting matched string and its context Improve look of commit search output ('search' view) by better cutting of matched string and its context in match info, as suggested by Junio. For example, if you are looking for "very long search string" in the following line: Could somebody test this with very long search string, and see how you would now see: ...this with <<very long ... string>>, and see... instead of: Could som... <<very long search...>>, and see... (where <<something>> denotes emphasized / colored fragment; matched fragment to be more exact). For this feature, support for fourth [optional] parameter to chop_str subroutine was added. This fourth parameter is used to denote where to cut string to make it shorter. chop_str can now cut at the beginning (from the _left_ side of the string), in the middle (_center_ of the string), or at the end (from the _right_ side of the string); cutting from right is the default: chop_str(somestring, len, slop, 'left') -> ' ...string' chop_str(somestring, len, slop, 'center') -> 'som ... ing' chop_str(somestring, len, slop, 'right') -> 'somestr... ' If you want to use default slop (default additional length), use undef as value for third parameter to chop_str. While at it, return from chop_str early if given string is so short that chop_str couldn't shorten it. Simplify also regexp used by chop_str. Make ellipsis (dots) stick to shortened fragment for cutting at ends, to better see which part got shortened. Simplify passing all arguments to chop_str in chop_and_escape_str subroutine. This was needed to pass additional options to chop_str. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
17 years ago
$match = chop_str($match, 70, 5, 'center');
my $contextlen = int((80 - length($match))/2);
$contextlen = 30 if ($contextlen > 30);
$lead = chop_str($lead, $contextlen, 10, 'left');
$trail = chop_str($trail, $contextlen, 10, 'right');
$lead = esc_html($lead);
$match = esc_html($match);
$trail = esc_html($trail);
print "$lead<span class=\"match\">$match</span>$trail<br />";
}
}
print "</td>\n" .
"<td class=\"link\">" .
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"commit", hash=>$co{'id'})}, "commit") .
" | " .
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"commitdiff", hash=>$co{'id'})}, "commitdiff") .
" | " .
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"tree", hash=>$co{'tree'}, hash_base=>$co{'id'})}, "tree");
print "</td>\n" .
"</tr>\n";
}
if (defined $extra) {
print "<tr>\n" .
"<td colspan=\"3\">$extra</td>\n" .
"</tr>\n";
}
print "</table>\n";
}
## ======================================================================
## ======================================================================
## actions
sub git_project_list {
my $order = $input_params{'order'};
if (defined $order && $order !~ m/none|project|descr|owner|age/) {
die_error(400, "Unknown order parameter");
}
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
my @list = git_get_projects_list();
if (!@list) {
die_error(404, "No projects found");
}
git_header_html();
if (-f $home_text) {
print "<div class=\"index_include\">\n";
insert_file($home_text);
print "</div>\n";
}
print $cgi->startform(-method => "get") .
"<p class=\"projsearch\">Search:\n" .
$cgi->textfield(-name => "s", -value => $searchtext) . "\n" .
"</p>" .
$cgi->end_form() . "\n";
git_project_list_body(\@list, $order);
git_footer_html();
}
sub git_forks {
my $order = $input_params{'order'};
if (defined $order && $order !~ m/none|project|descr|owner|age/) {
die_error(400, "Unknown order parameter");
}
my @list = git_get_projects_list($project);
if (!@list) {
die_error(404, "No forks found");
}
git_header_html();
git_print_page_nav('','');
git_print_header_div('summary', "$project forks");
git_project_list_body(\@list, $order);
git_footer_html();
}
sub git_project_index {
my @projects = git_get_projects_list($project);
print $cgi->header(
-type => 'text/plain',
-charset => 'utf-8',
-content_disposition => 'inline; filename="index.aux"');
foreach my $pr (@projects) {
if (!exists $pr->{'owner'}) {
$pr->{'owner'} = git_get_project_owner("$pr->{'path'}");
}
my ($path, $owner) = ($pr->{'path'}, $pr->{'owner'});
# quote as in CGI::Util::encode, but keep the slash, and use '+' for ' '
$path =~ s/([^a-zA-Z0-9_.\-\/ ])/sprintf("%%%02X", ord($1))/eg;
$owner =~ s/([^a-zA-Z0-9_.\-\/ ])/sprintf("%%%02X", ord($1))/eg;
$path =~ s/ /\+/g;
$owner =~ s/ /\+/g;
print "$path $owner\n";
}
}
20 years ago
sub git_summary {
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
my $descr = git_get_project_description($project) || "none";
my %co = parse_commit("HEAD");
my %cd = %co ? parse_date($co{'committer_epoch'}, $co{'committer_tz'}) : ();
my $head = $co{'id'};
20 years ago
my $owner = git_get_project_owner($project);
20 years ago
gitweb: Use git-for-each-ref to generate list of heads and/or tags Add two subroutines: git_get_heads_list and git_get_refs_list, which fill out needed parts of refs info (heads and tags respectively) info using single call to git-for-each-ref, instead of using git-peek-remote to get list of references and using parse_ref for each ref to get ref info, which in turn uses at least one call of git command. Replace call to git_get_refs_list in git_summary by call to git_get_references, git_get_heads_list and git_get_tags_list (simplifying this subroutine a bit). Use git_get_heads_list in git_heads and git_get_tags_list in git_tags. Modify git_tags_body slightly to accept output from git_get_tags_list. Remove no longer used, and a bit hackish, git_get_refs_list. parse_ref is no longer used, but is left for now. Generating "summary" and "tags" views should be much faster for projects which have large number of tags. CHANGES IN OUTPUT: Before, if ref in refs/tags was tag pointing to commit we used committer epoch as epoch for ref, and used tagger epoch as epoch only for tag pointing to object of other type. If ref in refs/tags was commit, we used committer epoch as epoch for ref (see parse_ref; we sorted in gitweb by 'epoch' field). Currently we use committer epoch for refs pointing to commit objects, and tagger epoch for refs pointing to tag object, even if tag points to commit. Simple ab benchmark before and after this patch for my git.git repository (git/jnareb-git.git) with some heads and tags added as compared to git.git repository, shows around 2.4-3.0 times speedup for "summary" and "tags" views: summary 3134 +/- 24.2 ms --> 1081 +/- 30.2 ms tags 2886 +/- 18.9 ms --> 1196 +/- 15.6 ms Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
my $refs = git_get_references();
# These get_*_list functions return one more to allow us to see if
# there are more ...
my @taglist = git_get_tags_list(16);
my @headlist = git_get_heads_list(16);
my @forklist;
my $check_forks = gitweb_check_feature('forks');
if ($check_forks) {
@forklist = git_get_projects_list($project);
}
20 years ago
git_header_html();
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
git_print_page_nav('summary','', $head);
20 years ago
print "<div class=\"title\">&nbsp;</div>\n";
print "<table class=\"projects_list\">\n" .
"<tr id=\"metadata_desc\"><td>description</td><td>" . esc_html($descr) . "</td></tr>\n" .
"<tr id=\"metadata_owner\"><td>owner</td><td>" . esc_html($owner) . "</td></tr>\n";
if (defined $cd{'rfc2822'}) {
print "<tr id=\"metadata_lchange\"><td>last change</td><td>$cd{'rfc2822'}</td></tr>\n";
}
# use per project git URL list in $projectroot/$project/cloneurl
# or make project git URL from git base URL and project name
my $url_tag = "URL";
my @url_list = git_get_project_url_list($project);
@url_list = map { "$_/$project" } @git_base_url_list unless @url_list;
foreach my $git_url (@url_list) {
next unless $git_url;
print "<tr class=\"metadata_url\"><td>$url_tag</td><td>$git_url</td></tr>\n";
$url_tag = "";
}
# Tag cloud
my $show_ctags = gitweb_check_feature('ctags');
if ($show_ctags) {
my $ctags = git_get_project_ctags($project);
my $cloud = git_populate_project_tagcloud($ctags);
print "<tr id=\"metadata_ctags\"><td>Content tags:<br />";
print "</td>\n<td>" unless %$ctags;
print "<form action=\"$show_ctags\" method=\"post\"><input type=\"hidden\" name=\"p\" value=\"$project\" />Add: <input type=\"text\" name=\"t\" size=\"8\" /></form>";
print "</td>\n<td>" if %$ctags;
print git_show_project_tagcloud($cloud, 48);
print "</td></tr>";
}
print "</table>\n";
if (-s "$projectroot/$project/README.html") {
print "<div class=\"title\">readme</div>\n" .
"<div class=\"readme\">\n";
insert_file("$projectroot/$project/README.html");
print "\n</div>\n"; # class="readme"
}
# we need to request one more than 16 (0..15) to check if
# those 16 are all
my @commitlist = $head ? parse_commits($head, 17) : ();
if (@commitlist) {
git_print_header_div('shortlog');
git_shortlog_body(\@commitlist, 0, 15, $refs,
$#commitlist <= 15 ? undef :
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"shortlog")}, "..."));
}
20 years ago
if (@taglist) {
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
git_print_header_div('tags');
git_tags_body(\@taglist, 0, 15,
$#taglist <= 15 ? undef :
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"tags")}, "..."));
20 years ago
}
20 years ago
if (@headlist) {
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
git_print_header_div('heads');
git_heads_body(\@headlist, $head, 0, 15,
$#headlist <= 15 ? undef :
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"heads")}, "..."));
20 years ago
}
if (@forklist) {
git_print_header_div('forks');
git_project_list_body(\@forklist, 'age', 0, 15,
$#forklist <= 15 ? undef :
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"forks")}, "..."),
'no_header');
}
20 years ago
git_footer_html();
}
20 years ago
sub git_tag {
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
my $head = git_get_head_hash($project);
20 years ago
git_header_html();
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
git_print_page_nav('','', $head,undef,$head);
my %tag = parse_tag($hash);
if (! %tag) {
die_error(404, "Unknown tag object");
}
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
git_print_header_div('commit', esc_html($tag{'name'}), $hash);
20 years ago
print "<div class=\"title_text\">\n" .
"<table class=\"object_header\">\n" .
"<tr>\n" .
"<td>object</td>\n" .
"<td>" . $cgi->a({-class => "list", -href => href(action=>$tag{'type'}, hash=>$tag{'object'})},
$tag{'object'}) . "</td>\n" .
"<td class=\"link\">" . $cgi->a({-href => href(action=>$tag{'type'}, hash=>$tag{'object'})},
$tag{'type'}) . "</td>\n" .
"</tr>\n";
20 years ago
if (defined($tag{'author'})) {
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
my %ad = parse_date($tag{'epoch'}, $tag{'tz'});
print "<tr><td>author</td><td>" . esc_html($tag{'author'}) . "</td></tr>\n";
print "<tr><td></td><td>" . $ad{'rfc2822'} .
sprintf(" (%02d:%02d %s)", $ad{'hour_local'}, $ad{'minute_local'}, $ad{'tz_local'}) .
"</td></tr>\n";
20 years ago
}
print "</table>\n\n" .
"</div>\n";
print "<div class=\"page_body\">";
my $comment = $tag{'comment'};
foreach my $line (@$comment) {
chomp $line;
print esc_html($line, -nbsp=>1) . "<br/>\n";
20 years ago
}
print "</div>\n";
git_footer_html();
}
sub git_blame {
my $fd;
my $ftype;
gitweb_check_feature('blame')
or die_error(403, "Blame view not allowed");
die_error(400, "No file name given") unless $file_name;
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
$hash_base ||= git_get_head_hash($project);
die_error(404, "Couldn't find base commit") unless ($hash_base);
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
my %co = parse_commit($hash_base)
or die_error(404, "Commit not found");
if (!defined $hash) {
$hash = git_get_hash_by_path($hash_base, $file_name, "blob")
or die_error(404, "Error looking up file");
}
$ftype = git_get_type($hash);
if ($ftype !~ "blob") {
die_error(400, "Object is not a blob");
}
open ($fd, "-|", git_cmd(), "blame", '-p', '--',
$file_name, $hash_base)
or die_error(500, "Open git-blame failed");
git_header_html();
my $formats_nav =
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"blob", -replay=>1)},
"blob") .
" | " .
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"history", -replay=>1)},
"history") .
" | " .
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"blame", file_name=>$file_name)},
"HEAD");
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
git_print_page_nav('','', $hash_base,$co{'tree'},$hash_base, $formats_nav);
git_print_header_div('commit', esc_html($co{'title'}), $hash_base);
git_print_page_path($file_name, $ftype, $hash_base);
my @rev_color = (qw(light2 dark2));
my $num_colors = scalar(@rev_color);
my $current_color = 0;
my $last_rev;
print <<HTML;
<div class="page_body">
<table class="blame">
<tr><th>Commit</th><th>Line</th><th>Data</th></tr>
HTML
my %metainfo = ();
while (1) {
$_ = <$fd>;
last unless defined $_;
my ($full_rev, $orig_lineno, $lineno, $group_size) =
/^([0-9a-f]{40}) (\d+) (\d+)(?: (\d+))?$/;
if (!exists $metainfo{$full_rev}) {
$metainfo{$full_rev} = {};
}
my $meta = $metainfo{$full_rev};
while (<$fd>) {
last if (s/^\t//);
if (/^(\S+) (.*)$/) {
$meta->{$1} = $2;
}
}
my $data = $_;
chomp $data;
my $rev = substr($full_rev, 0, 8);
my $author = $meta->{'author'};
my %date = parse_date($meta->{'author-time'},
$meta->{'author-tz'});
my $date = $date{'iso-tz'};
if ($group_size) {
$current_color = ++$current_color % $num_colors;
}
print "<tr class=\"$rev_color[$current_color]\">\n";
if ($group_size) {
print "<td class=\"sha1\"";
print " title=\"". esc_html($author) . ", $date\"";
print " rowspan=\"$group_size\"" if ($group_size > 1);
print ">";
print $cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"commit",
hash=>$full_rev,
file_name=>$file_name)},
esc_html($rev));
print "</td>\n";
}
open (my $dd, "-|", git_cmd(), "rev-parse", "$full_rev^")
or die_error(500, "Open git-rev-parse failed");
my $parent_commit = <$dd>;
close $dd;
chomp($parent_commit);
my $blamed = href(action => 'blame',
file_name => $meta->{'filename'},
hash_base => $parent_commit);
print "<td class=\"linenr\">";
print $cgi->a({ -href => "$blamed#l$orig_lineno",
-id => "l$lineno",
-class => "linenr" },
esc_html($lineno));
print "</td>";
print "<td class=\"pre\">" . esc_html($data) . "</td>\n";
print "</tr>\n";
}
print "</table>\n";
print "</div>";
close $fd
or print "Reading blob failed\n";
git_footer_html();
}
sub git_tags {
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
my $head = git_get_head_hash($project);
git_header_html();
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
git_print_page_nav('','', $head,undef,$head);
git_print_header_div('summary', $project);
gitweb: Use git-for-each-ref to generate list of heads and/or tags Add two subroutines: git_get_heads_list and git_get_refs_list, which fill out needed parts of refs info (heads and tags respectively) info using single call to git-for-each-ref, instead of using git-peek-remote to get list of references and using parse_ref for each ref to get ref info, which in turn uses at least one call of git command. Replace call to git_get_refs_list in git_summary by call to git_get_references, git_get_heads_list and git_get_tags_list (simplifying this subroutine a bit). Use git_get_heads_list in git_heads and git_get_tags_list in git_tags. Modify git_tags_body slightly to accept output from git_get_tags_list. Remove no longer used, and a bit hackish, git_get_refs_list. parse_ref is no longer used, but is left for now. Generating "summary" and "tags" views should be much faster for projects which have large number of tags. CHANGES IN OUTPUT: Before, if ref in refs/tags was tag pointing to commit we used committer epoch as epoch for ref, and used tagger epoch as epoch only for tag pointing to object of other type. If ref in refs/tags was commit, we used committer epoch as epoch for ref (see parse_ref; we sorted in gitweb by 'epoch' field). Currently we use committer epoch for refs pointing to commit objects, and tagger epoch for refs pointing to tag object, even if tag points to commit. Simple ab benchmark before and after this patch for my git.git repository (git/jnareb-git.git) with some heads and tags added as compared to git.git repository, shows around 2.4-3.0 times speedup for "summary" and "tags" views: summary 3134 +/- 24.2 ms --> 1081 +/- 30.2 ms tags 2886 +/- 18.9 ms --> 1196 +/- 15.6 ms Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
my @tagslist = git_get_tags_list();
if (@tagslist) {
git_tags_body(\@tagslist);
}
git_footer_html();
}
sub git_heads {
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
my $head = git_get_head_hash($project);
git_header_html();
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
git_print_page_nav('','', $head,undef,$head);
git_print_header_div('summary', $project);
gitweb: Use git-for-each-ref to generate list of heads and/or tags Add two subroutines: git_get_heads_list and git_get_refs_list, which fill out needed parts of refs info (heads and tags respectively) info using single call to git-for-each-ref, instead of using git-peek-remote to get list of references and using parse_ref for each ref to get ref info, which in turn uses at least one call of git command. Replace call to git_get_refs_list in git_summary by call to git_get_references, git_get_heads_list and git_get_tags_list (simplifying this subroutine a bit). Use git_get_heads_list in git_heads and git_get_tags_list in git_tags. Modify git_tags_body slightly to accept output from git_get_tags_list. Remove no longer used, and a bit hackish, git_get_refs_list. parse_ref is no longer used, but is left for now. Generating "summary" and "tags" views should be much faster for projects which have large number of tags. CHANGES IN OUTPUT: Before, if ref in refs/tags was tag pointing to commit we used committer epoch as epoch for ref, and used tagger epoch as epoch only for tag pointing to object of other type. If ref in refs/tags was commit, we used committer epoch as epoch for ref (see parse_ref; we sorted in gitweb by 'epoch' field). Currently we use committer epoch for refs pointing to commit objects, and tagger epoch for refs pointing to tag object, even if tag points to commit. Simple ab benchmark before and after this patch for my git.git repository (git/jnareb-git.git) with some heads and tags added as compared to git.git repository, shows around 2.4-3.0 times speedup for "summary" and "tags" views: summary 3134 +/- 24.2 ms --> 1081 +/- 30.2 ms tags 2886 +/- 18.9 ms --> 1196 +/- 15.6 ms Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
my @headslist = git_get_heads_list();
if (@headslist) {
git_heads_body(\@headslist, $head);
}
git_footer_html();
}
20 years ago
sub git_blob_plain {
my $type = shift;
my $expires;
if (!defined $hash) {
if (defined $file_name) {
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
my $base = $hash_base || git_get_head_hash($project);
$hash = git_get_hash_by_path($base, $file_name, "blob")
or die_error(404, "Cannot find file");
} else {
die_error(400, "No file name defined");
}
} elsif ($hash =~ m/^[0-9a-fA-F]{40}$/) {
# blobs defined by non-textual hash id's can be cached
$expires = "+1d";
}
open my $fd, "-|", git_cmd(), "cat-file", "blob", $hash
or die_error(500, "Open git-cat-file blob '$hash' failed");
# content-type (can include charset)
$type = blob_contenttype($fd, $file_name, $type);
# "save as" filename, even when no $file_name is given
my $save_as = "$hash";
if (defined $file_name) {
$save_as = $file_name;
} elsif ($type =~ m/^text\//) {
$save_as .= '.txt';
}
print $cgi->header(
-type => $type,
-expires => $expires,
-content_disposition => 'inline; filename="' . $save_as . '"');
20 years ago
undef $/;
binmode STDOUT, ':raw';
20 years ago
print <$fd>;
binmode STDOUT, ':utf8'; # as set at the beginning of gitweb.cgi
20 years ago
$/ = "\n";
close $fd;
}
sub git_blob {
my $expires;
if (!defined $hash) {
if (defined $file_name) {
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
my $base = $hash_base || git_get_head_hash($project);
$hash = git_get_hash_by_path($base, $file_name, "blob")
or die_error(404, "Cannot find file");
} else {
die_error(400, "No file name defined");
}
} elsif ($hash =~ m/^[0-9a-fA-F]{40}$/) {
# blobs defined by non-textual hash id's can be cached
$expires = "+1d";
}
my $have_blame = gitweb_check_feature('blame');
open my $fd, "-|", git_cmd(), "cat-file", "blob", $hash
or die_error(500, "Couldn't cat $file_name, $hash");
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
my $mimetype = blob_mimetype($fd, $file_name);
if ($mimetype !~ m!^(?:text/|image/(?:gif|png|jpeg)$)! && -B $fd) {
close $fd;
return git_blob_plain($mimetype);
}
# we can have blame only for text/* mimetype
$have_blame &&= ($mimetype =~ m!^text/!);
git_header_html(undef, $expires);
my $formats_nav = '';
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
if (defined $hash_base && (my %co = parse_commit($hash_base))) {
if (defined $file_name) {
if ($have_blame) {
$formats_nav .=
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"blame", -replay=>1)},
"blame") .
" | ";
}
$formats_nav .=
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"history", -replay=>1)},
"history") .
" | " .
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"blob_plain", -replay=>1)},
"raw") .
" | " .
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"blob",
hash_base=>"HEAD", file_name=>$file_name)},
"HEAD");
} else {
$formats_nav .=
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"blob_plain", -replay=>1)},
"raw");
}
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
git_print_page_nav('','', $hash_base,$co{'tree'},$hash_base, $formats_nav);
git_print_header_div('commit', esc_html($co{'title'}), $hash_base);
} else {
print "<div class=\"page_nav\">\n" .
"<br/><br/></div>\n" .
"<div class=\"title\">$hash</div>\n";
}
git_print_page_path($file_name, "blob", $hash_base);
print "<div class=\"page_body\">\n";
if ($mimetype =~ m!^image/!) {
print qq!<img type="$mimetype"!;
if ($file_name) {
print qq! alt="$file_name" title="$file_name"!;
}
print qq! src="! .
href(action=>"blob_plain", hash=>$hash,
hash_base=>$hash_base, file_name=>$file_name) .
qq!" />\n!;
} else {
my $nr;
while (my $line = <$fd>) {
chomp $line;
$nr++;
$line = untabify($line);
printf "<div class=\"pre\"><a id=\"l%i\" href=\"#l%i\" class=\"linenr\">%4i</a> %s</div>\n",
$nr, $nr, $nr, esc_html($line, -nbsp=>1);
}
}
close $fd
or print "Reading blob failed.\n";
print "</div>";
git_footer_html();
}
20 years ago
sub git_tree {
if (!defined $hash_base) {
$hash_base = "HEAD";
}
20 years ago
if (!defined $hash) {
20 years ago
if (defined $file_name) {
$hash = git_get_hash_by_path($hash_base, $file_name, "tree");
} else {
$hash = $hash_base;
20 years ago
}
20 years ago
}
die_error(404, "No such tree") unless defined($hash);
$/ = "\0";
open my $fd, "-|", git_cmd(), "ls-tree", '-z', $hash
or die_error(500, "Open git-ls-tree failed");
my @entries = map { chomp; $_ } <$fd>;
close $fd or die_error(404, "Reading tree failed");
$/ = "\n";
20 years ago
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
my $refs = git_get_references();
my $ref = format_ref_marker($refs, $hash_base);
20 years ago
git_header_html();
my $basedir = '';
my $have_blame = gitweb_check_feature('blame');
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
if (defined $hash_base && (my %co = parse_commit($hash_base))) {
my @views_nav = ();
if (defined $file_name) {
push @views_nav,
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"history", -replay=>1)},
"history"),
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"tree",
hash_base=>"HEAD", file_name=>$file_name)},
"HEAD"),
}
gitweb: snapshot cleanups & support for offering multiple formats - Centralize knowledge about snapshot formats (mime types, extensions, commands) in %known_snapshot_formats and improve how some of that information is specified. In particular, zip files are no longer a special case. - Add support for offering multiple snapshot formats to the user so that he/she can download a snapshot in the format he/she prefers. The site-wide or project configuration now gives a list of formats to offer, and if more than one format is offered, the "_snapshot_" link becomes something like "snapshot (_tar.bz2_ _zip_)". - If only one format is offered, a tooltip on the "_snapshot_" link tells the user what it is. - Fix out-of-date "tarball" -> "archive" in comment. Alert for gitweb site administrators: This patch changes the format of $feature{'snapshot'}{'default'} in gitweb_config.perl from a list of three pieces of information about a single format to a list of one or more formats you wish to offer from the set ('tgz', 'tbz2', 'zip'). Update your gitweb_config.perl appropriately. There was taken care for old-style gitweb configuration to work as it used to, but this backward compatibility works only for the values which correspond to gitweb.snapshot values of 'gzip', 'bzip2' and 'zip', i.e. ['x-gzip', 'gz', 'gzip'] ['x-bzip2', 'bz2', 'bzip2'] ['x-zip', 'zip', ''] The preferred names for gitweb.snapshot in repository configuration have also changed from 'gzip' and 'bzip2' to 'tgz' and 'tbz2', but the old names are still recognized for compatibility. Signed-off-by: Matt McCutchen <hashproduct@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
18 years ago
my $snapshot_links = format_snapshot_links($hash);
if (defined $snapshot_links) {
# FIXME: Should be available when we have no hash base as well.
gitweb: snapshot cleanups & support for offering multiple formats - Centralize knowledge about snapshot formats (mime types, extensions, commands) in %known_snapshot_formats and improve how some of that information is specified. In particular, zip files are no longer a special case. - Add support for offering multiple snapshot formats to the user so that he/she can download a snapshot in the format he/she prefers. The site-wide or project configuration now gives a list of formats to offer, and if more than one format is offered, the "_snapshot_" link becomes something like "snapshot (_tar.bz2_ _zip_)". - If only one format is offered, a tooltip on the "_snapshot_" link tells the user what it is. - Fix out-of-date "tarball" -> "archive" in comment. Alert for gitweb site administrators: This patch changes the format of $feature{'snapshot'}{'default'} in gitweb_config.perl from a list of three pieces of information about a single format to a list of one or more formats you wish to offer from the set ('tgz', 'tbz2', 'zip'). Update your gitweb_config.perl appropriately. There was taken care for old-style gitweb configuration to work as it used to, but this backward compatibility works only for the values which correspond to gitweb.snapshot values of 'gzip', 'bzip2' and 'zip', i.e. ['x-gzip', 'gz', 'gzip'] ['x-bzip2', 'bz2', 'bzip2'] ['x-zip', 'zip', ''] The preferred names for gitweb.snapshot in repository configuration have also changed from 'gzip' and 'bzip2' to 'tgz' and 'tbz2', but the old names are still recognized for compatibility. Signed-off-by: Matt McCutchen <hashproduct@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
18 years ago
push @views_nav, $snapshot_links;
}
git_print_page_nav('tree','', $hash_base, undef, undef, join(' | ', @views_nav));
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
git_print_header_div('commit', esc_html($co{'title'}) . $ref, $hash_base);
20 years ago
} else {
undef $hash_base;
20 years ago
print "<div class=\"page_nav\">\n";
print "<br/><br/></div>\n";
print "<div class=\"title\">$hash</div>\n";
}
20 years ago
if (defined $file_name) {
$basedir = $file_name;
if ($basedir ne '' && substr($basedir, -1) ne '/') {
$basedir .= '/';
}
git_print_page_path($file_name, 'tree', $hash_base);
20 years ago
}
20 years ago
print "<div class=\"page_body\">\n";
print "<table class=\"tree\">\n";
my $alternate = 1;
# '..' (top directory) link if possible
if (defined $hash_base &&
defined $file_name && $file_name =~ m![^/]+$!) {
if ($alternate) {
print "<tr class=\"dark\">\n";
} else {
print "<tr class=\"light\">\n";
}
$alternate ^= 1;
my $up = $file_name;
$up =~ s!/?[^/]+$!!;
undef $up unless $up;
# based on git_print_tree_entry
print '<td class="mode">' . mode_str('040000') . "</td>\n";
print '<td class="list">';
print $cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"tree", hash_base=>$hash_base,
file_name=>$up)},
"..");
print "</td>\n";
print "<td class=\"link\"></td>\n";
print "</tr>\n";
}
foreach my $line (@entries) {
my %t = parse_ls_tree_line($line, -z => 1);
20 years ago
if ($alternate) {
20 years ago
print "<tr class=\"dark\">\n";
20 years ago
} else {
20 years ago
print "<tr class=\"light\">\n";
20 years ago
}
$alternate ^= 1;
git_print_tree_entry(\%t, $basedir, $hash_base, $have_blame);
20 years ago
print "</tr>\n";
}
20 years ago
print "</table>\n" .
"</div>";
20 years ago
git_footer_html();
20 years ago
}
sub git_snapshot {
my $format = $input_params{'snapshot_format'};
if (!@snapshot_fmts) {
die_error(403, "Snapshots not allowed");
}
# default to first supported snapshot format
$format ||= $snapshot_fmts[0];
if ($format !~ m/^[a-z0-9]+$/) {
die_error(400, "Invalid snapshot format parameter");
} elsif (!exists($known_snapshot_formats{$format})) {
die_error(400, "Unknown snapshot format");
} elsif (!grep($_ eq $format, @snapshot_fmts)) {
die_error(403, "Unsupported snapshot format");
}
if (!defined $hash) {
$hash = git_get_head_hash($project);
}
my $name = $project;
$name =~ s,([^/])/*\.git$,$1,;
$name = basename($name);
my $filename = to_utf8($name);
$name =~ s/\047/\047\\\047\047/g;
my $cmd;
gitweb: snapshot cleanups & support for offering multiple formats - Centralize knowledge about snapshot formats (mime types, extensions, commands) in %known_snapshot_formats and improve how some of that information is specified. In particular, zip files are no longer a special case. - Add support for offering multiple snapshot formats to the user so that he/she can download a snapshot in the format he/she prefers. The site-wide or project configuration now gives a list of formats to offer, and if more than one format is offered, the "_snapshot_" link becomes something like "snapshot (_tar.bz2_ _zip_)". - If only one format is offered, a tooltip on the "_snapshot_" link tells the user what it is. - Fix out-of-date "tarball" -> "archive" in comment. Alert for gitweb site administrators: This patch changes the format of $feature{'snapshot'}{'default'} in gitweb_config.perl from a list of three pieces of information about a single format to a list of one or more formats you wish to offer from the set ('tgz', 'tbz2', 'zip'). Update your gitweb_config.perl appropriately. There was taken care for old-style gitweb configuration to work as it used to, but this backward compatibility works only for the values which correspond to gitweb.snapshot values of 'gzip', 'bzip2' and 'zip', i.e. ['x-gzip', 'gz', 'gzip'] ['x-bzip2', 'bz2', 'bzip2'] ['x-zip', 'zip', ''] The preferred names for gitweb.snapshot in repository configuration have also changed from 'gzip' and 'bzip2' to 'tgz' and 'tbz2', but the old names are still recognized for compatibility. Signed-off-by: Matt McCutchen <hashproduct@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
18 years ago
$filename .= "-$hash$known_snapshot_formats{$format}{'suffix'}";
$cmd = quote_command(
git_cmd(), 'archive',
"--format=$known_snapshot_formats{$format}{'format'}",
"--prefix=$name/", $hash);
gitweb: snapshot cleanups & support for offering multiple formats - Centralize knowledge about snapshot formats (mime types, extensions, commands) in %known_snapshot_formats and improve how some of that information is specified. In particular, zip files are no longer a special case. - Add support for offering multiple snapshot formats to the user so that he/she can download a snapshot in the format he/she prefers. The site-wide or project configuration now gives a list of formats to offer, and if more than one format is offered, the "_snapshot_" link becomes something like "snapshot (_tar.bz2_ _zip_)". - If only one format is offered, a tooltip on the "_snapshot_" link tells the user what it is. - Fix out-of-date "tarball" -> "archive" in comment. Alert for gitweb site administrators: This patch changes the format of $feature{'snapshot'}{'default'} in gitweb_config.perl from a list of three pieces of information about a single format to a list of one or more formats you wish to offer from the set ('tgz', 'tbz2', 'zip'). Update your gitweb_config.perl appropriately. There was taken care for old-style gitweb configuration to work as it used to, but this backward compatibility works only for the values which correspond to gitweb.snapshot values of 'gzip', 'bzip2' and 'zip', i.e. ['x-gzip', 'gz', 'gzip'] ['x-bzip2', 'bz2', 'bzip2'] ['x-zip', 'zip', ''] The preferred names for gitweb.snapshot in repository configuration have also changed from 'gzip' and 'bzip2' to 'tgz' and 'tbz2', but the old names are still recognized for compatibility. Signed-off-by: Matt McCutchen <hashproduct@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
18 years ago
if (exists $known_snapshot_formats{$format}{'compressor'}) {
$cmd .= ' | ' . quote_command(@{$known_snapshot_formats{$format}{'compressor'}});
}
print $cgi->header(
gitweb: snapshot cleanups & support for offering multiple formats - Centralize knowledge about snapshot formats (mime types, extensions, commands) in %known_snapshot_formats and improve how some of that information is specified. In particular, zip files are no longer a special case. - Add support for offering multiple snapshot formats to the user so that he/she can download a snapshot in the format he/she prefers. The site-wide or project configuration now gives a list of formats to offer, and if more than one format is offered, the "_snapshot_" link becomes something like "snapshot (_tar.bz2_ _zip_)". - If only one format is offered, a tooltip on the "_snapshot_" link tells the user what it is. - Fix out-of-date "tarball" -> "archive" in comment. Alert for gitweb site administrators: This patch changes the format of $feature{'snapshot'}{'default'} in gitweb_config.perl from a list of three pieces of information about a single format to a list of one or more formats you wish to offer from the set ('tgz', 'tbz2', 'zip'). Update your gitweb_config.perl appropriately. There was taken care for old-style gitweb configuration to work as it used to, but this backward compatibility works only for the values which correspond to gitweb.snapshot values of 'gzip', 'bzip2' and 'zip', i.e. ['x-gzip', 'gz', 'gzip'] ['x-bzip2', 'bz2', 'bzip2'] ['x-zip', 'zip', ''] The preferred names for gitweb.snapshot in repository configuration have also changed from 'gzip' and 'bzip2' to 'tgz' and 'tbz2', but the old names are still recognized for compatibility. Signed-off-by: Matt McCutchen <hashproduct@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
18 years ago
-type => $known_snapshot_formats{$format}{'type'},
-content_disposition => 'inline; filename="' . "$filename" . '"',
-status => '200 OK');
open my $fd, "-|", $cmd
or die_error(500, "Execute git-archive failed");
binmode STDOUT, ':raw';
print <$fd>;
binmode STDOUT, ':utf8'; # as set at the beginning of gitweb.cgi
close $fd;
}
20 years ago
sub git_log {
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
my $head = git_get_head_hash($project);
20 years ago
if (!defined $hash) {
20 years ago
$hash = $head;
20 years ago
}
20 years ago
if (!defined $page) {
$page = 0;
20 years ago
}
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
my $refs = git_get_references();
20 years ago
my @commitlist = parse_commits($hash, 101, (100 * $page));
20 years ago
my $paging_nav = format_paging_nav('log', $hash, $head, $page, $#commitlist >= 100);
git_header_html();
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
git_print_page_nav('log','', $hash,undef,undef, $paging_nav);
if (!@commitlist) {
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
my %co = parse_commit($hash);
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
git_print_header_div('summary', $project);
20 years ago
print "<div class=\"page_body\"> Last change $co{'age_string'}.<br/><br/></div>\n";
}
my $to = ($#commitlist >= 99) ? (99) : ($#commitlist);
for (my $i = 0; $i <= $to; $i++) {
my %co = %{$commitlist[$i]};
20 years ago
next if !%co;
my $commit = $co{'id'};
my $ref = format_ref_marker($refs, $commit);
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
my %ad = parse_date($co{'author_epoch'});
git_print_header_div('commit',
"<span class=\"age\">$co{'age_string'}</span>" .
esc_html($co{'title'}) . $ref,
$commit);
20 years ago
print "<div class=\"title_text\">\n" .
"<div class=\"log_link\">\n" .
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"commit", hash=>$commit)}, "commit") .
" | " .
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"commitdiff", hash=>$commit)}, "commitdiff") .
" | " .
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"tree", hash=>$commit, hash_base=>$commit)}, "tree") .
20 years ago
"<br/>\n" .
20 years ago
"</div>\n" .
"<i>" . esc_html($co{'author_name'}) . " [$ad{'rfc2822'}]</i><br/>\n" .
"</div>\n";
print "<div class=\"log_body\">\n";
git_print_log($co{'comment'}, -final_empty_line=> 1);
20 years ago
print "</div>\n";
}
if ($#commitlist >= 100) {
print "<div class=\"page_nav\">\n";
print $cgi->a({-href => href(-replay=>1, page=>$page+1),
-accesskey => "n", -title => "Alt-n"}, "next");
print "</div>\n";
20 years ago
}
20 years ago
git_footer_html();
20 years ago
}
sub git_commit {
$hash ||= $hash_base || "HEAD";
my %co = parse_commit($hash)
or die_error(404, "Unknown commit object");
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
my %ad = parse_date($co{'author_epoch'}, $co{'author_tz'});
my %cd = parse_date($co{'committer_epoch'}, $co{'committer_tz'});
my $parent = $co{'parent'};
my $parents = $co{'parents'}; # listref
# we need to prepare $formats_nav before any parameter munging
my $formats_nav;
if (!defined $parent) {
# --root commitdiff
$formats_nav .= '(initial)';
} elsif (@$parents == 1) {
# single parent commit
$formats_nav .=
'(parent: ' .
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"commit",
hash=>$parent)},
esc_html(substr($parent, 0, 7))) .
')';
} else {
# merge commit
$formats_nav .=
'(merge: ' .
join(' ', map {
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"commit",
hash=>$_)},
esc_html(substr($_, 0, 7)));
} @$parents ) .
')';
}
20 years ago
if (!defined $parent) {
$parent = "--root";
20 years ago
}
my @difftree;
open my $fd, "-|", git_cmd(), "diff-tree", '-r', "--no-commit-id",
@diff_opts,
(@$parents <= 1 ? $parent : '-c'),
$hash, "--"
or die_error(500, "Open git-diff-tree failed");
@difftree = map { chomp; $_ } <$fd>;
close $fd or die_error(404, "Reading git-diff-tree failed");
# non-textual hash id's can be cached
my $expires;
if ($hash =~ m/^[0-9a-fA-F]{40}$/) {
$expires = "+1d";
}
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
my $refs = git_get_references();
my $ref = format_ref_marker($refs, $co{'id'});
git_header_html(undef, $expires);
git_print_page_nav('commit', '',
$hash, $co{'tree'}, $hash,
$formats_nav);
20 years ago
if (defined $co{'parent'}) {
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
git_print_header_div('commitdiff', esc_html($co{'title'}) . $ref, $hash);
20 years ago
} else {
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
git_print_header_div('tree', esc_html($co{'title'}) . $ref, $co{'tree'}, $hash);
20 years ago
}
20 years ago
print "<div class=\"title_text\">\n" .
"<table class=\"object_header\">\n";
print "<tr><td>author</td><td>" . esc_html($co{'author'}) . "</td></tr>\n".
20 years ago
"<tr>" .
"<td></td><td> $ad{'rfc2822'}";
20 years ago
if ($ad{'hour_local'} < 6) {
printf(" (<span class=\"atnight\">%02d:%02d</span> %s)",
$ad{'hour_local'}, $ad{'minute_local'}, $ad{'tz_local'});
20 years ago
} else {
printf(" (%02d:%02d %s)",
$ad{'hour_local'}, $ad{'minute_local'}, $ad{'tz_local'});
20 years ago
}
20 years ago
print "</td>" .
"</tr>\n";
print "<tr><td>committer</td><td>" . esc_html($co{'committer'}) . "</td></tr>\n";
print "<tr><td></td><td> $cd{'rfc2822'}" .
sprintf(" (%02d:%02d %s)", $cd{'hour_local'}, $cd{'minute_local'}, $cd{'tz_local'}) .
"</td></tr>\n";
print "<tr><td>commit</td><td class=\"sha1\">$co{'id'}</td></tr>\n";
20 years ago
print "<tr>" .
"<td>tree</td>" .
"<td class=\"sha1\">" .
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"tree", hash=>$co{'tree'}, hash_base=>$hash),
class => "list"}, $co{'tree'}) .
20 years ago
"</td>" .
"<td class=\"link\">" .
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"tree", hash=>$co{'tree'}, hash_base=>$hash)},
"tree");
gitweb: snapshot cleanups & support for offering multiple formats - Centralize knowledge about snapshot formats (mime types, extensions, commands) in %known_snapshot_formats and improve how some of that information is specified. In particular, zip files are no longer a special case. - Add support for offering multiple snapshot formats to the user so that he/she can download a snapshot in the format he/she prefers. The site-wide or project configuration now gives a list of formats to offer, and if more than one format is offered, the "_snapshot_" link becomes something like "snapshot (_tar.bz2_ _zip_)". - If only one format is offered, a tooltip on the "_snapshot_" link tells the user what it is. - Fix out-of-date "tarball" -> "archive" in comment. Alert for gitweb site administrators: This patch changes the format of $feature{'snapshot'}{'default'} in gitweb_config.perl from a list of three pieces of information about a single format to a list of one or more formats you wish to offer from the set ('tgz', 'tbz2', 'zip'). Update your gitweb_config.perl appropriately. There was taken care for old-style gitweb configuration to work as it used to, but this backward compatibility works only for the values which correspond to gitweb.snapshot values of 'gzip', 'bzip2' and 'zip', i.e. ['x-gzip', 'gz', 'gzip'] ['x-bzip2', 'bz2', 'bzip2'] ['x-zip', 'zip', ''] The preferred names for gitweb.snapshot in repository configuration have also changed from 'gzip' and 'bzip2' to 'tgz' and 'tbz2', but the old names are still recognized for compatibility. Signed-off-by: Matt McCutchen <hashproduct@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
18 years ago
my $snapshot_links = format_snapshot_links($hash);
if (defined $snapshot_links) {
print " | " . $snapshot_links;
}
print "</td>" .
20 years ago
"</tr>\n";
20 years ago
foreach my $par (@$parents) {
20 years ago
print "<tr>" .
"<td>parent</td>" .
"<td class=\"sha1\">" .
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"commit", hash=>$par),
class => "list"}, $par) .
"</td>" .
20 years ago
"<td class=\"link\">" .
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"commit", hash=>$par)}, "commit") .
" | " .
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"commitdiff", hash=>$hash, hash_parent=>$par)}, "diff") .
20 years ago
"</td>" .
"</tr>\n";
20 years ago
}
print "</table>".
20 years ago
"</div>\n";
20 years ago
print "<div class=\"page_body\">\n";
git_print_log($co{'comment'});
20 years ago
print "</div>\n";
git_difftree_body(\@difftree, $hash, @$parents);
20 years ago
git_footer_html();
20 years ago
}
sub git_object {
# object is defined by:
# - hash or hash_base alone
# - hash_base and file_name
my $type;
# - hash or hash_base alone
if ($hash || ($hash_base && !defined $file_name)) {
my $object_id = $hash || $hash_base;
open my $fd, "-|", quote_command(
git_cmd(), 'cat-file', '-t', $object_id) . ' 2> /dev/null'
or die_error(404, "Object does not exist");
$type = <$fd>;
chomp $type;
close $fd
or die_error(404, "Object does not exist");
# - hash_base and file_name
} elsif ($hash_base && defined $file_name) {
$file_name =~ s,/+$,,;
system(git_cmd(), "cat-file", '-e', $hash_base) == 0
or die_error(404, "Base object does not exist");
# here errors should not hapen
open my $fd, "-|", git_cmd(), "ls-tree", $hash_base, "--", $file_name
or die_error(500, "Open git-ls-tree failed");
my $line = <$fd>;
close $fd;
#'100644 blob 0fa3f3a66fb6a137f6ec2c19351ed4d807070ffa panic.c'
unless ($line && $line =~ m/^([0-9]+) (.+) ([0-9a-fA-F]{40})\t/) {
die_error(404, "File or directory for given base does not exist");
}
$type = $2;
$hash = $3;
} else {
die_error(400, "Not enough information to find object");
}
print $cgi->redirect(-uri => href(action=>$type, -full=>1,
hash=>$hash, hash_base=>$hash_base,
file_name=>$file_name),
-status => '302 Found');
}
20 years ago
sub git_blobdiff {
my $format = shift || 'html';
gitweb: Use git-diff-tree or git-diff patch output for blobdiff This is second part of removing gitweb dependency on external diff (used in git_diff_print). Get rid of git_diff_print invocation in git_blobdiff, and use either git-diff-tree (when both hash_base and hash_parent_base are provided) patch format or git-diff patch format (when only hash and hash_parent are provided) for output. Supported URI schemes, and output formats: * New URI scheme: both hash_base and hash_parent_base (trees-ish containing blobs versions we want to compare) are provided. Also either filename is provided, or hash (of blob) is provided (we try to find filename then). For this scheme we have copying and renames detection, mode changes, file types etc., and information extended diff header is correct. * Old URI scheme: hash_parent_base is not provided, we use hash and hash_parent to directly compare blobs using git-diff. If no filename is given, blobs hashes are used in place of filenames. This scheme has always "blob" as file type, it cannot detect mode changes, and we rely on CGI parameters to provide name of the file. Added git_to_hash subroutine, which transforms symbolic name or list of symbolic name to hash or list of hashes using git-rev-parse. To have "blob" instead of "unknown" (or "file" regardless of the type) in "gitweb diff header" for legacy scheme, file_type function now returns its argument if it is not octal string. Added support for fake "2" status code in git_patchset_body. Such code is generated by git_blobdiff in legacy scheme case. ATTENTION: The order of arguments (operands) to git-diff is reversed (sic!) to have correct diff in the legacy (no hash_parent_base) case. $hash_parent, $hash ordering is commented out, as it gives reversed patch (at least for git version 1.4.1.1) as compared to output in new scheme and output of older gitweb version. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
my $fd;
my @difftree;
my %diffinfo;
my $expires;
gitweb: Use git-diff-tree or git-diff patch output for blobdiff This is second part of removing gitweb dependency on external diff (used in git_diff_print). Get rid of git_diff_print invocation in git_blobdiff, and use either git-diff-tree (when both hash_base and hash_parent_base are provided) patch format or git-diff patch format (when only hash and hash_parent are provided) for output. Supported URI schemes, and output formats: * New URI scheme: both hash_base and hash_parent_base (trees-ish containing blobs versions we want to compare) are provided. Also either filename is provided, or hash (of blob) is provided (we try to find filename then). For this scheme we have copying and renames detection, mode changes, file types etc., and information extended diff header is correct. * Old URI scheme: hash_parent_base is not provided, we use hash and hash_parent to directly compare blobs using git-diff. If no filename is given, blobs hashes are used in place of filenames. This scheme has always "blob" as file type, it cannot detect mode changes, and we rely on CGI parameters to provide name of the file. Added git_to_hash subroutine, which transforms symbolic name or list of symbolic name to hash or list of hashes using git-rev-parse. To have "blob" instead of "unknown" (or "file" regardless of the type) in "gitweb diff header" for legacy scheme, file_type function now returns its argument if it is not octal string. Added support for fake "2" status code in git_patchset_body. Such code is generated by git_blobdiff in legacy scheme case. ATTENTION: The order of arguments (operands) to git-diff is reversed (sic!) to have correct diff in the legacy (no hash_parent_base) case. $hash_parent, $hash ordering is commented out, as it gives reversed patch (at least for git version 1.4.1.1) as compared to output in new scheme and output of older gitweb version. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
# preparing $fd and %diffinfo for git_patchset_body
# new style URI
if (defined $hash_base && defined $hash_parent_base) {
if (defined $file_name) {
# read raw output
open $fd, "-|", git_cmd(), "diff-tree", '-r', @diff_opts,
$hash_parent_base, $hash_base,
"--", (defined $file_parent ? $file_parent : ()), $file_name
or die_error(500, "Open git-diff-tree failed");
gitweb: Use git-diff-tree or git-diff patch output for blobdiff This is second part of removing gitweb dependency on external diff (used in git_diff_print). Get rid of git_diff_print invocation in git_blobdiff, and use either git-diff-tree (when both hash_base and hash_parent_base are provided) patch format or git-diff patch format (when only hash and hash_parent are provided) for output. Supported URI schemes, and output formats: * New URI scheme: both hash_base and hash_parent_base (trees-ish containing blobs versions we want to compare) are provided. Also either filename is provided, or hash (of blob) is provided (we try to find filename then). For this scheme we have copying and renames detection, mode changes, file types etc., and information extended diff header is correct. * Old URI scheme: hash_parent_base is not provided, we use hash and hash_parent to directly compare blobs using git-diff. If no filename is given, blobs hashes are used in place of filenames. This scheme has always "blob" as file type, it cannot detect mode changes, and we rely on CGI parameters to provide name of the file. Added git_to_hash subroutine, which transforms symbolic name or list of symbolic name to hash or list of hashes using git-rev-parse. To have "blob" instead of "unknown" (or "file" regardless of the type) in "gitweb diff header" for legacy scheme, file_type function now returns its argument if it is not octal string. Added support for fake "2" status code in git_patchset_body. Such code is generated by git_blobdiff in legacy scheme case. ATTENTION: The order of arguments (operands) to git-diff is reversed (sic!) to have correct diff in the legacy (no hash_parent_base) case. $hash_parent, $hash ordering is commented out, as it gives reversed patch (at least for git version 1.4.1.1) as compared to output in new scheme and output of older gitweb version. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
@difftree = map { chomp; $_ } <$fd>;
close $fd
or die_error(404, "Reading git-diff-tree failed");
gitweb: Use git-diff-tree or git-diff patch output for blobdiff This is second part of removing gitweb dependency on external diff (used in git_diff_print). Get rid of git_diff_print invocation in git_blobdiff, and use either git-diff-tree (when both hash_base and hash_parent_base are provided) patch format or git-diff patch format (when only hash and hash_parent are provided) for output. Supported URI schemes, and output formats: * New URI scheme: both hash_base and hash_parent_base (trees-ish containing blobs versions we want to compare) are provided. Also either filename is provided, or hash (of blob) is provided (we try to find filename then). For this scheme we have copying and renames detection, mode changes, file types etc., and information extended diff header is correct. * Old URI scheme: hash_parent_base is not provided, we use hash and hash_parent to directly compare blobs using git-diff. If no filename is given, blobs hashes are used in place of filenames. This scheme has always "blob" as file type, it cannot detect mode changes, and we rely on CGI parameters to provide name of the file. Added git_to_hash subroutine, which transforms symbolic name or list of symbolic name to hash or list of hashes using git-rev-parse. To have "blob" instead of "unknown" (or "file" regardless of the type) in "gitweb diff header" for legacy scheme, file_type function now returns its argument if it is not octal string. Added support for fake "2" status code in git_patchset_body. Such code is generated by git_blobdiff in legacy scheme case. ATTENTION: The order of arguments (operands) to git-diff is reversed (sic!) to have correct diff in the legacy (no hash_parent_base) case. $hash_parent, $hash ordering is commented out, as it gives reversed patch (at least for git version 1.4.1.1) as compared to output in new scheme and output of older gitweb version. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
@difftree
or die_error(404, "Blob diff not found");
gitweb: Use git-diff-tree or git-diff patch output for blobdiff This is second part of removing gitweb dependency on external diff (used in git_diff_print). Get rid of git_diff_print invocation in git_blobdiff, and use either git-diff-tree (when both hash_base and hash_parent_base are provided) patch format or git-diff patch format (when only hash and hash_parent are provided) for output. Supported URI schemes, and output formats: * New URI scheme: both hash_base and hash_parent_base (trees-ish containing blobs versions we want to compare) are provided. Also either filename is provided, or hash (of blob) is provided (we try to find filename then). For this scheme we have copying and renames detection, mode changes, file types etc., and information extended diff header is correct. * Old URI scheme: hash_parent_base is not provided, we use hash and hash_parent to directly compare blobs using git-diff. If no filename is given, blobs hashes are used in place of filenames. This scheme has always "blob" as file type, it cannot detect mode changes, and we rely on CGI parameters to provide name of the file. Added git_to_hash subroutine, which transforms symbolic name or list of symbolic name to hash or list of hashes using git-rev-parse. To have "blob" instead of "unknown" (or "file" regardless of the type) in "gitweb diff header" for legacy scheme, file_type function now returns its argument if it is not octal string. Added support for fake "2" status code in git_patchset_body. Such code is generated by git_blobdiff in legacy scheme case. ATTENTION: The order of arguments (operands) to git-diff is reversed (sic!) to have correct diff in the legacy (no hash_parent_base) case. $hash_parent, $hash ordering is commented out, as it gives reversed patch (at least for git version 1.4.1.1) as compared to output in new scheme and output of older gitweb version. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
} elsif (defined $hash &&
$hash =~ /[0-9a-fA-F]{40}/) {
# try to find filename from $hash
gitweb: Use git-diff-tree or git-diff patch output for blobdiff This is second part of removing gitweb dependency on external diff (used in git_diff_print). Get rid of git_diff_print invocation in git_blobdiff, and use either git-diff-tree (when both hash_base and hash_parent_base are provided) patch format or git-diff patch format (when only hash and hash_parent are provided) for output. Supported URI schemes, and output formats: * New URI scheme: both hash_base and hash_parent_base (trees-ish containing blobs versions we want to compare) are provided. Also either filename is provided, or hash (of blob) is provided (we try to find filename then). For this scheme we have copying and renames detection, mode changes, file types etc., and information extended diff header is correct. * Old URI scheme: hash_parent_base is not provided, we use hash and hash_parent to directly compare blobs using git-diff. If no filename is given, blobs hashes are used in place of filenames. This scheme has always "blob" as file type, it cannot detect mode changes, and we rely on CGI parameters to provide name of the file. Added git_to_hash subroutine, which transforms symbolic name or list of symbolic name to hash or list of hashes using git-rev-parse. To have "blob" instead of "unknown" (or "file" regardless of the type) in "gitweb diff header" for legacy scheme, file_type function now returns its argument if it is not octal string. Added support for fake "2" status code in git_patchset_body. Such code is generated by git_blobdiff in legacy scheme case. ATTENTION: The order of arguments (operands) to git-diff is reversed (sic!) to have correct diff in the legacy (no hash_parent_base) case. $hash_parent, $hash ordering is commented out, as it gives reversed patch (at least for git version 1.4.1.1) as compared to output in new scheme and output of older gitweb version. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
# read filtered raw output
open $fd, "-|", git_cmd(), "diff-tree", '-r', @diff_opts,
$hash_parent_base, $hash_base, "--"
or die_error(500, "Open git-diff-tree failed");
gitweb: Use git-diff-tree or git-diff patch output for blobdiff This is second part of removing gitweb dependency on external diff (used in git_diff_print). Get rid of git_diff_print invocation in git_blobdiff, and use either git-diff-tree (when both hash_base and hash_parent_base are provided) patch format or git-diff patch format (when only hash and hash_parent are provided) for output. Supported URI schemes, and output formats: * New URI scheme: both hash_base and hash_parent_base (trees-ish containing blobs versions we want to compare) are provided. Also either filename is provided, or hash (of blob) is provided (we try to find filename then). For this scheme we have copying and renames detection, mode changes, file types etc., and information extended diff header is correct. * Old URI scheme: hash_parent_base is not provided, we use hash and hash_parent to directly compare blobs using git-diff. If no filename is given, blobs hashes are used in place of filenames. This scheme has always "blob" as file type, it cannot detect mode changes, and we rely on CGI parameters to provide name of the file. Added git_to_hash subroutine, which transforms symbolic name or list of symbolic name to hash or list of hashes using git-rev-parse. To have "blob" instead of "unknown" (or "file" regardless of the type) in "gitweb diff header" for legacy scheme, file_type function now returns its argument if it is not octal string. Added support for fake "2" status code in git_patchset_body. Such code is generated by git_blobdiff in legacy scheme case. ATTENTION: The order of arguments (operands) to git-diff is reversed (sic!) to have correct diff in the legacy (no hash_parent_base) case. $hash_parent, $hash ordering is commented out, as it gives reversed patch (at least for git version 1.4.1.1) as compared to output in new scheme and output of older gitweb version. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
@difftree =
# ':100644 100644 03b21826... 3b93d5e7... M ls-files.c'
# $hash == to_id
grep { /^:[0-7]{6} [0-7]{6} [0-9a-fA-F]{40} $hash/ }
map { chomp; $_ } <$fd>;
close $fd
or die_error(404, "Reading git-diff-tree failed");
gitweb: Use git-diff-tree or git-diff patch output for blobdiff This is second part of removing gitweb dependency on external diff (used in git_diff_print). Get rid of git_diff_print invocation in git_blobdiff, and use either git-diff-tree (when both hash_base and hash_parent_base are provided) patch format or git-diff patch format (when only hash and hash_parent are provided) for output. Supported URI schemes, and output formats: * New URI scheme: both hash_base and hash_parent_base (trees-ish containing blobs versions we want to compare) are provided. Also either filename is provided, or hash (of blob) is provided (we try to find filename then). For this scheme we have copying and renames detection, mode changes, file types etc., and information extended diff header is correct. * Old URI scheme: hash_parent_base is not provided, we use hash and hash_parent to directly compare blobs using git-diff. If no filename is given, blobs hashes are used in place of filenames. This scheme has always "blob" as file type, it cannot detect mode changes, and we rely on CGI parameters to provide name of the file. Added git_to_hash subroutine, which transforms symbolic name or list of symbolic name to hash or list of hashes using git-rev-parse. To have "blob" instead of "unknown" (or "file" regardless of the type) in "gitweb diff header" for legacy scheme, file_type function now returns its argument if it is not octal string. Added support for fake "2" status code in git_patchset_body. Such code is generated by git_blobdiff in legacy scheme case. ATTENTION: The order of arguments (operands) to git-diff is reversed (sic!) to have correct diff in the legacy (no hash_parent_base) case. $hash_parent, $hash ordering is commented out, as it gives reversed patch (at least for git version 1.4.1.1) as compared to output in new scheme and output of older gitweb version. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
@difftree
or die_error(404, "Blob diff not found");
gitweb: Use git-diff-tree or git-diff patch output for blobdiff This is second part of removing gitweb dependency on external diff (used in git_diff_print). Get rid of git_diff_print invocation in git_blobdiff, and use either git-diff-tree (when both hash_base and hash_parent_base are provided) patch format or git-diff patch format (when only hash and hash_parent are provided) for output. Supported URI schemes, and output formats: * New URI scheme: both hash_base and hash_parent_base (trees-ish containing blobs versions we want to compare) are provided. Also either filename is provided, or hash (of blob) is provided (we try to find filename then). For this scheme we have copying and renames detection, mode changes, file types etc., and information extended diff header is correct. * Old URI scheme: hash_parent_base is not provided, we use hash and hash_parent to directly compare blobs using git-diff. If no filename is given, blobs hashes are used in place of filenames. This scheme has always "blob" as file type, it cannot detect mode changes, and we rely on CGI parameters to provide name of the file. Added git_to_hash subroutine, which transforms symbolic name or list of symbolic name to hash or list of hashes using git-rev-parse. To have "blob" instead of "unknown" (or "file" regardless of the type) in "gitweb diff header" for legacy scheme, file_type function now returns its argument if it is not octal string. Added support for fake "2" status code in git_patchset_body. Such code is generated by git_blobdiff in legacy scheme case. ATTENTION: The order of arguments (operands) to git-diff is reversed (sic!) to have correct diff in the legacy (no hash_parent_base) case. $hash_parent, $hash ordering is commented out, as it gives reversed patch (at least for git version 1.4.1.1) as compared to output in new scheme and output of older gitweb version. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
} else {
die_error(400, "Missing one of the blob diff parameters");
gitweb: Use git-diff-tree or git-diff patch output for blobdiff This is second part of removing gitweb dependency on external diff (used in git_diff_print). Get rid of git_diff_print invocation in git_blobdiff, and use either git-diff-tree (when both hash_base and hash_parent_base are provided) patch format or git-diff patch format (when only hash and hash_parent are provided) for output. Supported URI schemes, and output formats: * New URI scheme: both hash_base and hash_parent_base (trees-ish containing blobs versions we want to compare) are provided. Also either filename is provided, or hash (of blob) is provided (we try to find filename then). For this scheme we have copying and renames detection, mode changes, file types etc., and information extended diff header is correct. * Old URI scheme: hash_parent_base is not provided, we use hash and hash_parent to directly compare blobs using git-diff. If no filename is given, blobs hashes are used in place of filenames. This scheme has always "blob" as file type, it cannot detect mode changes, and we rely on CGI parameters to provide name of the file. Added git_to_hash subroutine, which transforms symbolic name or list of symbolic name to hash or list of hashes using git-rev-parse. To have "blob" instead of "unknown" (or "file" regardless of the type) in "gitweb diff header" for legacy scheme, file_type function now returns its argument if it is not octal string. Added support for fake "2" status code in git_patchset_body. Such code is generated by git_blobdiff in legacy scheme case. ATTENTION: The order of arguments (operands) to git-diff is reversed (sic!) to have correct diff in the legacy (no hash_parent_base) case. $hash_parent, $hash ordering is commented out, as it gives reversed patch (at least for git version 1.4.1.1) as compared to output in new scheme and output of older gitweb version. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
}
if (@difftree > 1) {
die_error(400, "Ambiguous blob diff specification");
gitweb: Use git-diff-tree or git-diff patch output for blobdiff This is second part of removing gitweb dependency on external diff (used in git_diff_print). Get rid of git_diff_print invocation in git_blobdiff, and use either git-diff-tree (when both hash_base and hash_parent_base are provided) patch format or git-diff patch format (when only hash and hash_parent are provided) for output. Supported URI schemes, and output formats: * New URI scheme: both hash_base and hash_parent_base (trees-ish containing blobs versions we want to compare) are provided. Also either filename is provided, or hash (of blob) is provided (we try to find filename then). For this scheme we have copying and renames detection, mode changes, file types etc., and information extended diff header is correct. * Old URI scheme: hash_parent_base is not provided, we use hash and hash_parent to directly compare blobs using git-diff. If no filename is given, blobs hashes are used in place of filenames. This scheme has always "blob" as file type, it cannot detect mode changes, and we rely on CGI parameters to provide name of the file. Added git_to_hash subroutine, which transforms symbolic name or list of symbolic name to hash or list of hashes using git-rev-parse. To have "blob" instead of "unknown" (or "file" regardless of the type) in "gitweb diff header" for legacy scheme, file_type function now returns its argument if it is not octal string. Added support for fake "2" status code in git_patchset_body. Such code is generated by git_blobdiff in legacy scheme case. ATTENTION: The order of arguments (operands) to git-diff is reversed (sic!) to have correct diff in the legacy (no hash_parent_base) case. $hash_parent, $hash ordering is commented out, as it gives reversed patch (at least for git version 1.4.1.1) as compared to output in new scheme and output of older gitweb version. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
}
%diffinfo = parse_difftree_raw_line($difftree[0]);
$file_parent ||= $diffinfo{'from_file'} || $file_name;
$file_name ||= $diffinfo{'to_file'};
gitweb: Use git-diff-tree or git-diff patch output for blobdiff This is second part of removing gitweb dependency on external diff (used in git_diff_print). Get rid of git_diff_print invocation in git_blobdiff, and use either git-diff-tree (when both hash_base and hash_parent_base are provided) patch format or git-diff patch format (when only hash and hash_parent are provided) for output. Supported URI schemes, and output formats: * New URI scheme: both hash_base and hash_parent_base (trees-ish containing blobs versions we want to compare) are provided. Also either filename is provided, or hash (of blob) is provided (we try to find filename then). For this scheme we have copying and renames detection, mode changes, file types etc., and information extended diff header is correct. * Old URI scheme: hash_parent_base is not provided, we use hash and hash_parent to directly compare blobs using git-diff. If no filename is given, blobs hashes are used in place of filenames. This scheme has always "blob" as file type, it cannot detect mode changes, and we rely on CGI parameters to provide name of the file. Added git_to_hash subroutine, which transforms symbolic name or list of symbolic name to hash or list of hashes using git-rev-parse. To have "blob" instead of "unknown" (or "file" regardless of the type) in "gitweb diff header" for legacy scheme, file_type function now returns its argument if it is not octal string. Added support for fake "2" status code in git_patchset_body. Such code is generated by git_blobdiff in legacy scheme case. ATTENTION: The order of arguments (operands) to git-diff is reversed (sic!) to have correct diff in the legacy (no hash_parent_base) case. $hash_parent, $hash ordering is commented out, as it gives reversed patch (at least for git version 1.4.1.1) as compared to output in new scheme and output of older gitweb version. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
$hash_parent ||= $diffinfo{'from_id'};
$hash ||= $diffinfo{'to_id'};
# non-textual hash id's can be cached
if ($hash_base =~ m/^[0-9a-fA-F]{40}$/ &&
$hash_parent_base =~ m/^[0-9a-fA-F]{40}$/) {
$expires = '+1d';
}
gitweb: Use git-diff-tree or git-diff patch output for blobdiff This is second part of removing gitweb dependency on external diff (used in git_diff_print). Get rid of git_diff_print invocation in git_blobdiff, and use either git-diff-tree (when both hash_base and hash_parent_base are provided) patch format or git-diff patch format (when only hash and hash_parent are provided) for output. Supported URI schemes, and output formats: * New URI scheme: both hash_base and hash_parent_base (trees-ish containing blobs versions we want to compare) are provided. Also either filename is provided, or hash (of blob) is provided (we try to find filename then). For this scheme we have copying and renames detection, mode changes, file types etc., and information extended diff header is correct. * Old URI scheme: hash_parent_base is not provided, we use hash and hash_parent to directly compare blobs using git-diff. If no filename is given, blobs hashes are used in place of filenames. This scheme has always "blob" as file type, it cannot detect mode changes, and we rely on CGI parameters to provide name of the file. Added git_to_hash subroutine, which transforms symbolic name or list of symbolic name to hash or list of hashes using git-rev-parse. To have "blob" instead of "unknown" (or "file" regardless of the type) in "gitweb diff header" for legacy scheme, file_type function now returns its argument if it is not octal string. Added support for fake "2" status code in git_patchset_body. Such code is generated by git_blobdiff in legacy scheme case. ATTENTION: The order of arguments (operands) to git-diff is reversed (sic!) to have correct diff in the legacy (no hash_parent_base) case. $hash_parent, $hash ordering is commented out, as it gives reversed patch (at least for git version 1.4.1.1) as compared to output in new scheme and output of older gitweb version. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
# open patch output
open $fd, "-|", git_cmd(), "diff-tree", '-r', @diff_opts,
'-p', ($format eq 'html' ? "--full-index" : ()),
$hash_parent_base, $hash_base,
"--", (defined $file_parent ? $file_parent : ()), $file_name
or die_error(500, "Open git-diff-tree failed");
gitweb: Use git-diff-tree or git-diff patch output for blobdiff This is second part of removing gitweb dependency on external diff (used in git_diff_print). Get rid of git_diff_print invocation in git_blobdiff, and use either git-diff-tree (when both hash_base and hash_parent_base are provided) patch format or git-diff patch format (when only hash and hash_parent are provided) for output. Supported URI schemes, and output formats: * New URI scheme: both hash_base and hash_parent_base (trees-ish containing blobs versions we want to compare) are provided. Also either filename is provided, or hash (of blob) is provided (we try to find filename then). For this scheme we have copying and renames detection, mode changes, file types etc., and information extended diff header is correct. * Old URI scheme: hash_parent_base is not provided, we use hash and hash_parent to directly compare blobs using git-diff. If no filename is given, blobs hashes are used in place of filenames. This scheme has always "blob" as file type, it cannot detect mode changes, and we rely on CGI parameters to provide name of the file. Added git_to_hash subroutine, which transforms symbolic name or list of symbolic name to hash or list of hashes using git-rev-parse. To have "blob" instead of "unknown" (or "file" regardless of the type) in "gitweb diff header" for legacy scheme, file_type function now returns its argument if it is not octal string. Added support for fake "2" status code in git_patchset_body. Such code is generated by git_blobdiff in legacy scheme case. ATTENTION: The order of arguments (operands) to git-diff is reversed (sic!) to have correct diff in the legacy (no hash_parent_base) case. $hash_parent, $hash ordering is commented out, as it gives reversed patch (at least for git version 1.4.1.1) as compared to output in new scheme and output of older gitweb version. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
}
# old/legacy style URI -- not generated anymore since 1.4.3.
if (!%diffinfo) {
die_error('404 Not Found', "Missing one of the blob diff parameters")
gitweb: Use git-diff-tree or git-diff patch output for blobdiff This is second part of removing gitweb dependency on external diff (used in git_diff_print). Get rid of git_diff_print invocation in git_blobdiff, and use either git-diff-tree (when both hash_base and hash_parent_base are provided) patch format or git-diff patch format (when only hash and hash_parent are provided) for output. Supported URI schemes, and output formats: * New URI scheme: both hash_base and hash_parent_base (trees-ish containing blobs versions we want to compare) are provided. Also either filename is provided, or hash (of blob) is provided (we try to find filename then). For this scheme we have copying and renames detection, mode changes, file types etc., and information extended diff header is correct. * Old URI scheme: hash_parent_base is not provided, we use hash and hash_parent to directly compare blobs using git-diff. If no filename is given, blobs hashes are used in place of filenames. This scheme has always "blob" as file type, it cannot detect mode changes, and we rely on CGI parameters to provide name of the file. Added git_to_hash subroutine, which transforms symbolic name or list of symbolic name to hash or list of hashes using git-rev-parse. To have "blob" instead of "unknown" (or "file" regardless of the type) in "gitweb diff header" for legacy scheme, file_type function now returns its argument if it is not octal string. Added support for fake "2" status code in git_patchset_body. Such code is generated by git_blobdiff in legacy scheme case. ATTENTION: The order of arguments (operands) to git-diff is reversed (sic!) to have correct diff in the legacy (no hash_parent_base) case. $hash_parent, $hash ordering is commented out, as it gives reversed patch (at least for git version 1.4.1.1) as compared to output in new scheme and output of older gitweb version. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
}
# header
if ($format eq 'html') {
my $formats_nav =
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"blobdiff_plain", -replay=>1)},
"raw");
git_header_html(undef, $expires);
if (defined $hash_base && (my %co = parse_commit($hash_base))) {
git_print_page_nav('','', $hash_base,$co{'tree'},$hash_base, $formats_nav);
git_print_header_div('commit', esc_html($co{'title'}), $hash_base);
} else {
print "<div class=\"page_nav\"><br/>$formats_nav<br/></div>\n";
print "<div class=\"title\">$hash vs $hash_parent</div>\n";
}
if (defined $file_name) {
git_print_page_path($file_name, "blob", $hash_base);
} else {
print "<div class=\"page_path\"></div>\n";
}
} elsif ($format eq 'plain') {
print $cgi->header(
-type => 'text/plain',
-charset => 'utf-8',
-expires => $expires,
-content_disposition => 'inline; filename="' . "$file_name" . '.patch"');
print "X-Git-Url: " . $cgi->self_url() . "\n\n";
gitweb: Use git-diff-tree or git-diff patch output for blobdiff This is second part of removing gitweb dependency on external diff (used in git_diff_print). Get rid of git_diff_print invocation in git_blobdiff, and use either git-diff-tree (when both hash_base and hash_parent_base are provided) patch format or git-diff patch format (when only hash and hash_parent are provided) for output. Supported URI schemes, and output formats: * New URI scheme: both hash_base and hash_parent_base (trees-ish containing blobs versions we want to compare) are provided. Also either filename is provided, or hash (of blob) is provided (we try to find filename then). For this scheme we have copying and renames detection, mode changes, file types etc., and information extended diff header is correct. * Old URI scheme: hash_parent_base is not provided, we use hash and hash_parent to directly compare blobs using git-diff. If no filename is given, blobs hashes are used in place of filenames. This scheme has always "blob" as file type, it cannot detect mode changes, and we rely on CGI parameters to provide name of the file. Added git_to_hash subroutine, which transforms symbolic name or list of symbolic name to hash or list of hashes using git-rev-parse. To have "blob" instead of "unknown" (or "file" regardless of the type) in "gitweb diff header" for legacy scheme, file_type function now returns its argument if it is not octal string. Added support for fake "2" status code in git_patchset_body. Such code is generated by git_blobdiff in legacy scheme case. ATTENTION: The order of arguments (operands) to git-diff is reversed (sic!) to have correct diff in the legacy (no hash_parent_base) case. $hash_parent, $hash ordering is commented out, as it gives reversed patch (at least for git version 1.4.1.1) as compared to output in new scheme and output of older gitweb version. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
} else {
die_error(400, "Unknown blobdiff format");
gitweb: Use git-diff-tree or git-diff patch output for blobdiff This is second part of removing gitweb dependency on external diff (used in git_diff_print). Get rid of git_diff_print invocation in git_blobdiff, and use either git-diff-tree (when both hash_base and hash_parent_base are provided) patch format or git-diff patch format (when only hash and hash_parent are provided) for output. Supported URI schemes, and output formats: * New URI scheme: both hash_base and hash_parent_base (trees-ish containing blobs versions we want to compare) are provided. Also either filename is provided, or hash (of blob) is provided (we try to find filename then). For this scheme we have copying and renames detection, mode changes, file types etc., and information extended diff header is correct. * Old URI scheme: hash_parent_base is not provided, we use hash and hash_parent to directly compare blobs using git-diff. If no filename is given, blobs hashes are used in place of filenames. This scheme has always "blob" as file type, it cannot detect mode changes, and we rely on CGI parameters to provide name of the file. Added git_to_hash subroutine, which transforms symbolic name or list of symbolic name to hash or list of hashes using git-rev-parse. To have "blob" instead of "unknown" (or "file" regardless of the type) in "gitweb diff header" for legacy scheme, file_type function now returns its argument if it is not octal string. Added support for fake "2" status code in git_patchset_body. Such code is generated by git_blobdiff in legacy scheme case. ATTENTION: The order of arguments (operands) to git-diff is reversed (sic!) to have correct diff in the legacy (no hash_parent_base) case. $hash_parent, $hash ordering is commented out, as it gives reversed patch (at least for git version 1.4.1.1) as compared to output in new scheme and output of older gitweb version. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
}
# patch
if ($format eq 'html') {
print "<div class=\"page_body\">\n";
gitweb: Use git-diff-tree or git-diff patch output for blobdiff This is second part of removing gitweb dependency on external diff (used in git_diff_print). Get rid of git_diff_print invocation in git_blobdiff, and use either git-diff-tree (when both hash_base and hash_parent_base are provided) patch format or git-diff patch format (when only hash and hash_parent are provided) for output. Supported URI schemes, and output formats: * New URI scheme: both hash_base and hash_parent_base (trees-ish containing blobs versions we want to compare) are provided. Also either filename is provided, or hash (of blob) is provided (we try to find filename then). For this scheme we have copying and renames detection, mode changes, file types etc., and information extended diff header is correct. * Old URI scheme: hash_parent_base is not provided, we use hash and hash_parent to directly compare blobs using git-diff. If no filename is given, blobs hashes are used in place of filenames. This scheme has always "blob" as file type, it cannot detect mode changes, and we rely on CGI parameters to provide name of the file. Added git_to_hash subroutine, which transforms symbolic name or list of symbolic name to hash or list of hashes using git-rev-parse. To have "blob" instead of "unknown" (or "file" regardless of the type) in "gitweb diff header" for legacy scheme, file_type function now returns its argument if it is not octal string. Added support for fake "2" status code in git_patchset_body. Such code is generated by git_blobdiff in legacy scheme case. ATTENTION: The order of arguments (operands) to git-diff is reversed (sic!) to have correct diff in the legacy (no hash_parent_base) case. $hash_parent, $hash ordering is commented out, as it gives reversed patch (at least for git version 1.4.1.1) as compared to output in new scheme and output of older gitweb version. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
git_patchset_body($fd, [ \%diffinfo ], $hash_base, $hash_parent_base);
close $fd;
gitweb: Use git-diff-tree or git-diff patch output for blobdiff This is second part of removing gitweb dependency on external diff (used in git_diff_print). Get rid of git_diff_print invocation in git_blobdiff, and use either git-diff-tree (when both hash_base and hash_parent_base are provided) patch format or git-diff patch format (when only hash and hash_parent are provided) for output. Supported URI schemes, and output formats: * New URI scheme: both hash_base and hash_parent_base (trees-ish containing blobs versions we want to compare) are provided. Also either filename is provided, or hash (of blob) is provided (we try to find filename then). For this scheme we have copying and renames detection, mode changes, file types etc., and information extended diff header is correct. * Old URI scheme: hash_parent_base is not provided, we use hash and hash_parent to directly compare blobs using git-diff. If no filename is given, blobs hashes are used in place of filenames. This scheme has always "blob" as file type, it cannot detect mode changes, and we rely on CGI parameters to provide name of the file. Added git_to_hash subroutine, which transforms symbolic name or list of symbolic name to hash or list of hashes using git-rev-parse. To have "blob" instead of "unknown" (or "file" regardless of the type) in "gitweb diff header" for legacy scheme, file_type function now returns its argument if it is not octal string. Added support for fake "2" status code in git_patchset_body. Such code is generated by git_blobdiff in legacy scheme case. ATTENTION: The order of arguments (operands) to git-diff is reversed (sic!) to have correct diff in the legacy (no hash_parent_base) case. $hash_parent, $hash ordering is commented out, as it gives reversed patch (at least for git version 1.4.1.1) as compared to output in new scheme and output of older gitweb version. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
print "</div>\n"; # class="page_body"
git_footer_html();
} else {
while (my $line = <$fd>) {
$line =~ s!a/($hash|$hash_parent)!'a/'.esc_path($diffinfo{'from_file'})!eg;
$line =~ s!b/($hash|$hash_parent)!'b/'.esc_path($diffinfo{'to_file'})!eg;
print $line;
last if $line =~ m!^\+\+\+!;
}
local $/ = undef;
print <$fd>;
close $fd;
}
20 years ago
}
20 years ago
sub git_blobdiff_plain {
git_blobdiff('plain');
20 years ago
}
20 years ago
sub git_commitdiff {
gitweb: Use git-diff-tree patch output for commitdiff Get rid of git_diff_print invocation in git_commitdiff and therefore external diff (/usr/bin/diff) invocation, and use only git-diff-tree to generate patch. git_commitdiff and git_commitdiff_plain are collapsed into one subroutine git_commitdiff, with format (currently 'html' which is default format corresponding to git_commitdiff, and 'plain' corresponding to git_commitdiff_plain) specified in argument. Separate patch (diff) pretty-printing into git_patchset_body. It is used in git_commitdiff. Separate patch (diff) line formatting from git_diff_print into format_diff_line function. It is used in git_patchset_body. While at it, add $hash parameter to git_difftree_body, according to rule that inner functions should use parameter passing, and not global variables. CHANGES TO OUTPUT: * "commitdiff" now products patches with renaming and copying detection (git-diff-tree is invoked with -M and -C options). Empty patches (mode changes and pure renames and copying) are not written currently. Former version broke renaming and copying, and didn't notice mode changes, like this version. * "commitdiff" output is now divided into several div elements of class "log", "patchset" and "patch". * "commitdiff_plain" now only generates X-Git-Tag: line only if there is tag pointing to the current commit. Former version which wrote first tag following current commit was broken[*1*]; besides we are interested rather in tags _preceding_ the commit, and _heads_ following the commit. X-Git-Url: now is current URL; former version tried[*2*] to output URL to HTML version of commitdiff. * "commitdiff_plain" is generated by git-diff-tree, and has therefore has git specific extensions to diff format: "git diff" header and optional extended header lines. FOOTNOTES [*1*] First it generated rev-list starting from HEAD even if hash_base parameter was set, second it wasn't corrected according to changes made in git_get_references (formerly read_info_ref) output, third even for older version of read_info_ref output it didn't work for multiple tags pointing to the current commit (rare). [*2*] It wrote URL for commitdiff without hash_parent, which produces diff to first parent and is not the same as current diff if it is diff of merge commit to non-first parent. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
my $format = shift || 'html';
$hash ||= $hash_base || "HEAD";
my %co = parse_commit($hash)
or die_error(404, "Unknown commit object");
# choose format for commitdiff for merge
if (! defined $hash_parent && @{$co{'parents'}} > 1) {
$hash_parent = '--cc';
}
# we need to prepare $formats_nav before almost any parameter munging
my $formats_nav;
if ($format eq 'html') {
$formats_nav =
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"commitdiff_plain", -replay=>1)},
"raw");
if (defined $hash_parent &&
$hash_parent ne '-c' && $hash_parent ne '--cc') {
# commitdiff with two commits given
my $hash_parent_short = $hash_parent;
if ($hash_parent =~ m/^[0-9a-fA-F]{40}$/) {
$hash_parent_short = substr($hash_parent, 0, 7);
}
$formats_nav .=
' (from';
for (my $i = 0; $i < @{$co{'parents'}}; $i++) {
if ($co{'parents'}[$i] eq $hash_parent) {
$formats_nav .= ' parent ' . ($i+1);
last;
}
}
$formats_nav .= ': ' .
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"commitdiff",
hash=>$hash_parent)},
esc_html($hash_parent_short)) .
')';
} elsif (!$co{'parent'}) {
# --root commitdiff
$formats_nav .= ' (initial)';
} elsif (scalar @{$co{'parents'}} == 1) {
# single parent commit
$formats_nav .=
' (parent: ' .
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"commitdiff",
hash=>$co{'parent'})},
esc_html(substr($co{'parent'}, 0, 7))) .
')';
} else {
# merge commit
if ($hash_parent eq '--cc') {
$formats_nav .= ' | ' .
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"commitdiff",
hash=>$hash, hash_parent=>'-c')},
'combined');
} else { # $hash_parent eq '-c'
$formats_nav .= ' | ' .
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"commitdiff",
hash=>$hash, hash_parent=>'--cc')},
'compact');
}
$formats_nav .=
' (merge: ' .
join(' ', map {
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"commitdiff",
hash=>$_)},
esc_html(substr($_, 0, 7)));
} @{$co{'parents'}} ) .
')';
}
}
my $hash_parent_param = $hash_parent;
if (!defined $hash_parent_param) {
# --cc for multiple parents, --root for parentless
$hash_parent_param =
@{$co{'parents'}} > 1 ? '--cc' : $co{'parent'} || '--root';
20 years ago
}
gitweb: Use git-diff-tree patch output for commitdiff Get rid of git_diff_print invocation in git_commitdiff and therefore external diff (/usr/bin/diff) invocation, and use only git-diff-tree to generate patch. git_commitdiff and git_commitdiff_plain are collapsed into one subroutine git_commitdiff, with format (currently 'html' which is default format corresponding to git_commitdiff, and 'plain' corresponding to git_commitdiff_plain) specified in argument. Separate patch (diff) pretty-printing into git_patchset_body. It is used in git_commitdiff. Separate patch (diff) line formatting from git_diff_print into format_diff_line function. It is used in git_patchset_body. While at it, add $hash parameter to git_difftree_body, according to rule that inner functions should use parameter passing, and not global variables. CHANGES TO OUTPUT: * "commitdiff" now products patches with renaming and copying detection (git-diff-tree is invoked with -M and -C options). Empty patches (mode changes and pure renames and copying) are not written currently. Former version broke renaming and copying, and didn't notice mode changes, like this version. * "commitdiff" output is now divided into several div elements of class "log", "patchset" and "patch". * "commitdiff_plain" now only generates X-Git-Tag: line only if there is tag pointing to the current commit. Former version which wrote first tag following current commit was broken[*1*]; besides we are interested rather in tags _preceding_ the commit, and _heads_ following the commit. X-Git-Url: now is current URL; former version tried[*2*] to output URL to HTML version of commitdiff. * "commitdiff_plain" is generated by git-diff-tree, and has therefore has git specific extensions to diff format: "git diff" header and optional extended header lines. FOOTNOTES [*1*] First it generated rev-list starting from HEAD even if hash_base parameter was set, second it wasn't corrected according to changes made in git_get_references (formerly read_info_ref) output, third even for older version of read_info_ref output it didn't work for multiple tags pointing to the current commit (rare). [*2*] It wrote URL for commitdiff without hash_parent, which produces diff to first parent and is not the same as current diff if it is diff of merge commit to non-first parent. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
# read commitdiff
my $fd;
my @difftree;
if ($format eq 'html') {
open $fd, "-|", git_cmd(), "diff-tree", '-r', @diff_opts,
"--no-commit-id", "--patch-with-raw", "--full-index",
$hash_parent_param, $hash, "--"
or die_error(500, "Open git-diff-tree failed");
gitweb: Use git-diff-tree patch output for commitdiff Get rid of git_diff_print invocation in git_commitdiff and therefore external diff (/usr/bin/diff) invocation, and use only git-diff-tree to generate patch. git_commitdiff and git_commitdiff_plain are collapsed into one subroutine git_commitdiff, with format (currently 'html' which is default format corresponding to git_commitdiff, and 'plain' corresponding to git_commitdiff_plain) specified in argument. Separate patch (diff) pretty-printing into git_patchset_body. It is used in git_commitdiff. Separate patch (diff) line formatting from git_diff_print into format_diff_line function. It is used in git_patchset_body. While at it, add $hash parameter to git_difftree_body, according to rule that inner functions should use parameter passing, and not global variables. CHANGES TO OUTPUT: * "commitdiff" now products patches with renaming and copying detection (git-diff-tree is invoked with -M and -C options). Empty patches (mode changes and pure renames and copying) are not written currently. Former version broke renaming and copying, and didn't notice mode changes, like this version. * "commitdiff" output is now divided into several div elements of class "log", "patchset" and "patch". * "commitdiff_plain" now only generates X-Git-Tag: line only if there is tag pointing to the current commit. Former version which wrote first tag following current commit was broken[*1*]; besides we are interested rather in tags _preceding_ the commit, and _heads_ following the commit. X-Git-Url: now is current URL; former version tried[*2*] to output URL to HTML version of commitdiff. * "commitdiff_plain" is generated by git-diff-tree, and has therefore has git specific extensions to diff format: "git diff" header and optional extended header lines. FOOTNOTES [*1*] First it generated rev-list starting from HEAD even if hash_base parameter was set, second it wasn't corrected according to changes made in git_get_references (formerly read_info_ref) output, third even for older version of read_info_ref output it didn't work for multiple tags pointing to the current commit (rare). [*2*] It wrote URL for commitdiff without hash_parent, which produces diff to first parent and is not the same as current diff if it is diff of merge commit to non-first parent. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
while (my $line = <$fd>) {
chomp $line;
gitweb: Use git-diff-tree patch output for commitdiff Get rid of git_diff_print invocation in git_commitdiff and therefore external diff (/usr/bin/diff) invocation, and use only git-diff-tree to generate patch. git_commitdiff and git_commitdiff_plain are collapsed into one subroutine git_commitdiff, with format (currently 'html' which is default format corresponding to git_commitdiff, and 'plain' corresponding to git_commitdiff_plain) specified in argument. Separate patch (diff) pretty-printing into git_patchset_body. It is used in git_commitdiff. Separate patch (diff) line formatting from git_diff_print into format_diff_line function. It is used in git_patchset_body. While at it, add $hash parameter to git_difftree_body, according to rule that inner functions should use parameter passing, and not global variables. CHANGES TO OUTPUT: * "commitdiff" now products patches with renaming and copying detection (git-diff-tree is invoked with -M and -C options). Empty patches (mode changes and pure renames and copying) are not written currently. Former version broke renaming and copying, and didn't notice mode changes, like this version. * "commitdiff" output is now divided into several div elements of class "log", "patchset" and "patch". * "commitdiff_plain" now only generates X-Git-Tag: line only if there is tag pointing to the current commit. Former version which wrote first tag following current commit was broken[*1*]; besides we are interested rather in tags _preceding_ the commit, and _heads_ following the commit. X-Git-Url: now is current URL; former version tried[*2*] to output URL to HTML version of commitdiff. * "commitdiff_plain" is generated by git-diff-tree, and has therefore has git specific extensions to diff format: "git diff" header and optional extended header lines. FOOTNOTES [*1*] First it generated rev-list starting from HEAD even if hash_base parameter was set, second it wasn't corrected according to changes made in git_get_references (formerly read_info_ref) output, third even for older version of read_info_ref output it didn't work for multiple tags pointing to the current commit (rare). [*2*] It wrote URL for commitdiff without hash_parent, which produces diff to first parent and is not the same as current diff if it is diff of merge commit to non-first parent. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
# empty line ends raw part of diff-tree output
last unless $line;
push @difftree, scalar parse_difftree_raw_line($line);
gitweb: Use git-diff-tree patch output for commitdiff Get rid of git_diff_print invocation in git_commitdiff and therefore external diff (/usr/bin/diff) invocation, and use only git-diff-tree to generate patch. git_commitdiff and git_commitdiff_plain are collapsed into one subroutine git_commitdiff, with format (currently 'html' which is default format corresponding to git_commitdiff, and 'plain' corresponding to git_commitdiff_plain) specified in argument. Separate patch (diff) pretty-printing into git_patchset_body. It is used in git_commitdiff. Separate patch (diff) line formatting from git_diff_print into format_diff_line function. It is used in git_patchset_body. While at it, add $hash parameter to git_difftree_body, according to rule that inner functions should use parameter passing, and not global variables. CHANGES TO OUTPUT: * "commitdiff" now products patches with renaming and copying detection (git-diff-tree is invoked with -M and -C options). Empty patches (mode changes and pure renames and copying) are not written currently. Former version broke renaming and copying, and didn't notice mode changes, like this version. * "commitdiff" output is now divided into several div elements of class "log", "patchset" and "patch". * "commitdiff_plain" now only generates X-Git-Tag: line only if there is tag pointing to the current commit. Former version which wrote first tag following current commit was broken[*1*]; besides we are interested rather in tags _preceding_ the commit, and _heads_ following the commit. X-Git-Url: now is current URL; former version tried[*2*] to output URL to HTML version of commitdiff. * "commitdiff_plain" is generated by git-diff-tree, and has therefore has git specific extensions to diff format: "git diff" header and optional extended header lines. FOOTNOTES [*1*] First it generated rev-list starting from HEAD even if hash_base parameter was set, second it wasn't corrected according to changes made in git_get_references (formerly read_info_ref) output, third even for older version of read_info_ref output it didn't work for multiple tags pointing to the current commit (rare). [*2*] It wrote URL for commitdiff without hash_parent, which produces diff to first parent and is not the same as current diff if it is diff of merge commit to non-first parent. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
}
} elsif ($format eq 'plain') {
open $fd, "-|", git_cmd(), "diff-tree", '-r', @diff_opts,
'-p', $hash_parent_param, $hash, "--"
or die_error(500, "Open git-diff-tree failed");
gitweb: Use git-diff-tree patch output for commitdiff Get rid of git_diff_print invocation in git_commitdiff and therefore external diff (/usr/bin/diff) invocation, and use only git-diff-tree to generate patch. git_commitdiff and git_commitdiff_plain are collapsed into one subroutine git_commitdiff, with format (currently 'html' which is default format corresponding to git_commitdiff, and 'plain' corresponding to git_commitdiff_plain) specified in argument. Separate patch (diff) pretty-printing into git_patchset_body. It is used in git_commitdiff. Separate patch (diff) line formatting from git_diff_print into format_diff_line function. It is used in git_patchset_body. While at it, add $hash parameter to git_difftree_body, according to rule that inner functions should use parameter passing, and not global variables. CHANGES TO OUTPUT: * "commitdiff" now products patches with renaming and copying detection (git-diff-tree is invoked with -M and -C options). Empty patches (mode changes and pure renames and copying) are not written currently. Former version broke renaming and copying, and didn't notice mode changes, like this version. * "commitdiff" output is now divided into several div elements of class "log", "patchset" and "patch". * "commitdiff_plain" now only generates X-Git-Tag: line only if there is tag pointing to the current commit. Former version which wrote first tag following current commit was broken[*1*]; besides we are interested rather in tags _preceding_ the commit, and _heads_ following the commit. X-Git-Url: now is current URL; former version tried[*2*] to output URL to HTML version of commitdiff. * "commitdiff_plain" is generated by git-diff-tree, and has therefore has git specific extensions to diff format: "git diff" header and optional extended header lines. FOOTNOTES [*1*] First it generated rev-list starting from HEAD even if hash_base parameter was set, second it wasn't corrected according to changes made in git_get_references (formerly read_info_ref) output, third even for older version of read_info_ref output it didn't work for multiple tags pointing to the current commit (rare). [*2*] It wrote URL for commitdiff without hash_parent, which produces diff to first parent and is not the same as current diff if it is diff of merge commit to non-first parent. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
} else {
die_error(400, "Unknown commitdiff format");
gitweb: Use git-diff-tree patch output for commitdiff Get rid of git_diff_print invocation in git_commitdiff and therefore external diff (/usr/bin/diff) invocation, and use only git-diff-tree to generate patch. git_commitdiff and git_commitdiff_plain are collapsed into one subroutine git_commitdiff, with format (currently 'html' which is default format corresponding to git_commitdiff, and 'plain' corresponding to git_commitdiff_plain) specified in argument. Separate patch (diff) pretty-printing into git_patchset_body. It is used in git_commitdiff. Separate patch (diff) line formatting from git_diff_print into format_diff_line function. It is used in git_patchset_body. While at it, add $hash parameter to git_difftree_body, according to rule that inner functions should use parameter passing, and not global variables. CHANGES TO OUTPUT: * "commitdiff" now products patches with renaming and copying detection (git-diff-tree is invoked with -M and -C options). Empty patches (mode changes and pure renames and copying) are not written currently. Former version broke renaming and copying, and didn't notice mode changes, like this version. * "commitdiff" output is now divided into several div elements of class "log", "patchset" and "patch". * "commitdiff_plain" now only generates X-Git-Tag: line only if there is tag pointing to the current commit. Former version which wrote first tag following current commit was broken[*1*]; besides we are interested rather in tags _preceding_ the commit, and _heads_ following the commit. X-Git-Url: now is current URL; former version tried[*2*] to output URL to HTML version of commitdiff. * "commitdiff_plain" is generated by git-diff-tree, and has therefore has git specific extensions to diff format: "git diff" header and optional extended header lines. FOOTNOTES [*1*] First it generated rev-list starting from HEAD even if hash_base parameter was set, second it wasn't corrected according to changes made in git_get_references (formerly read_info_ref) output, third even for older version of read_info_ref output it didn't work for multiple tags pointing to the current commit (rare). [*2*] It wrote URL for commitdiff without hash_parent, which produces diff to first parent and is not the same as current diff if it is diff of merge commit to non-first parent. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
}
# non-textual hash id's can be cached
my $expires;
if ($hash =~ m/^[0-9a-fA-F]{40}$/) {
$expires = "+1d";
}
20 years ago
gitweb: Use git-diff-tree patch output for commitdiff Get rid of git_diff_print invocation in git_commitdiff and therefore external diff (/usr/bin/diff) invocation, and use only git-diff-tree to generate patch. git_commitdiff and git_commitdiff_plain are collapsed into one subroutine git_commitdiff, with format (currently 'html' which is default format corresponding to git_commitdiff, and 'plain' corresponding to git_commitdiff_plain) specified in argument. Separate patch (diff) pretty-printing into git_patchset_body. It is used in git_commitdiff. Separate patch (diff) line formatting from git_diff_print into format_diff_line function. It is used in git_patchset_body. While at it, add $hash parameter to git_difftree_body, according to rule that inner functions should use parameter passing, and not global variables. CHANGES TO OUTPUT: * "commitdiff" now products patches with renaming and copying detection (git-diff-tree is invoked with -M and -C options). Empty patches (mode changes and pure renames and copying) are not written currently. Former version broke renaming and copying, and didn't notice mode changes, like this version. * "commitdiff" output is now divided into several div elements of class "log", "patchset" and "patch". * "commitdiff_plain" now only generates X-Git-Tag: line only if there is tag pointing to the current commit. Former version which wrote first tag following current commit was broken[*1*]; besides we are interested rather in tags _preceding_ the commit, and _heads_ following the commit. X-Git-Url: now is current URL; former version tried[*2*] to output URL to HTML version of commitdiff. * "commitdiff_plain" is generated by git-diff-tree, and has therefore has git specific extensions to diff format: "git diff" header and optional extended header lines. FOOTNOTES [*1*] First it generated rev-list starting from HEAD even if hash_base parameter was set, second it wasn't corrected according to changes made in git_get_references (formerly read_info_ref) output, third even for older version of read_info_ref output it didn't work for multiple tags pointing to the current commit (rare). [*2*] It wrote URL for commitdiff without hash_parent, which produces diff to first parent and is not the same as current diff if it is diff of merge commit to non-first parent. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
# write commit message
if ($format eq 'html') {
my $refs = git_get_references();
my $ref = format_ref_marker($refs, $co{'id'});
20 years ago
gitweb: Use git-diff-tree patch output for commitdiff Get rid of git_diff_print invocation in git_commitdiff and therefore external diff (/usr/bin/diff) invocation, and use only git-diff-tree to generate patch. git_commitdiff and git_commitdiff_plain are collapsed into one subroutine git_commitdiff, with format (currently 'html' which is default format corresponding to git_commitdiff, and 'plain' corresponding to git_commitdiff_plain) specified in argument. Separate patch (diff) pretty-printing into git_patchset_body. It is used in git_commitdiff. Separate patch (diff) line formatting from git_diff_print into format_diff_line function. It is used in git_patchset_body. While at it, add $hash parameter to git_difftree_body, according to rule that inner functions should use parameter passing, and not global variables. CHANGES TO OUTPUT: * "commitdiff" now products patches with renaming and copying detection (git-diff-tree is invoked with -M and -C options). Empty patches (mode changes and pure renames and copying) are not written currently. Former version broke renaming and copying, and didn't notice mode changes, like this version. * "commitdiff" output is now divided into several div elements of class "log", "patchset" and "patch". * "commitdiff_plain" now only generates X-Git-Tag: line only if there is tag pointing to the current commit. Former version which wrote first tag following current commit was broken[*1*]; besides we are interested rather in tags _preceding_ the commit, and _heads_ following the commit. X-Git-Url: now is current URL; former version tried[*2*] to output URL to HTML version of commitdiff. * "commitdiff_plain" is generated by git-diff-tree, and has therefore has git specific extensions to diff format: "git diff" header and optional extended header lines. FOOTNOTES [*1*] First it generated rev-list starting from HEAD even if hash_base parameter was set, second it wasn't corrected according to changes made in git_get_references (formerly read_info_ref) output, third even for older version of read_info_ref output it didn't work for multiple tags pointing to the current commit (rare). [*2*] It wrote URL for commitdiff without hash_parent, which produces diff to first parent and is not the same as current diff if it is diff of merge commit to non-first parent. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
git_header_html(undef, $expires);
git_print_page_nav('commitdiff','', $hash,$co{'tree'},$hash, $formats_nav);
git_print_header_div('commit', esc_html($co{'title'}) . $ref, $hash);
git_print_authorship(\%co);
gitweb: Use git-diff-tree patch output for commitdiff Get rid of git_diff_print invocation in git_commitdiff and therefore external diff (/usr/bin/diff) invocation, and use only git-diff-tree to generate patch. git_commitdiff and git_commitdiff_plain are collapsed into one subroutine git_commitdiff, with format (currently 'html' which is default format corresponding to git_commitdiff, and 'plain' corresponding to git_commitdiff_plain) specified in argument. Separate patch (diff) pretty-printing into git_patchset_body. It is used in git_commitdiff. Separate patch (diff) line formatting from git_diff_print into format_diff_line function. It is used in git_patchset_body. While at it, add $hash parameter to git_difftree_body, according to rule that inner functions should use parameter passing, and not global variables. CHANGES TO OUTPUT: * "commitdiff" now products patches with renaming and copying detection (git-diff-tree is invoked with -M and -C options). Empty patches (mode changes and pure renames and copying) are not written currently. Former version broke renaming and copying, and didn't notice mode changes, like this version. * "commitdiff" output is now divided into several div elements of class "log", "patchset" and "patch". * "commitdiff_plain" now only generates X-Git-Tag: line only if there is tag pointing to the current commit. Former version which wrote first tag following current commit was broken[*1*]; besides we are interested rather in tags _preceding_ the commit, and _heads_ following the commit. X-Git-Url: now is current URL; former version tried[*2*] to output URL to HTML version of commitdiff. * "commitdiff_plain" is generated by git-diff-tree, and has therefore has git specific extensions to diff format: "git diff" header and optional extended header lines. FOOTNOTES [*1*] First it generated rev-list starting from HEAD even if hash_base parameter was set, second it wasn't corrected according to changes made in git_get_references (formerly read_info_ref) output, third even for older version of read_info_ref output it didn't work for multiple tags pointing to the current commit (rare). [*2*] It wrote URL for commitdiff without hash_parent, which produces diff to first parent and is not the same as current diff if it is diff of merge commit to non-first parent. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
print "<div class=\"page_body\">\n";
if (@{$co{'comment'}} > 1) {
print "<div class=\"log\">\n";
git_print_log($co{'comment'}, -final_empty_line=> 1, -remove_title => 1);
print "</div>\n"; # class="log"
}
gitweb: Use git-diff-tree patch output for commitdiff Get rid of git_diff_print invocation in git_commitdiff and therefore external diff (/usr/bin/diff) invocation, and use only git-diff-tree to generate patch. git_commitdiff and git_commitdiff_plain are collapsed into one subroutine git_commitdiff, with format (currently 'html' which is default format corresponding to git_commitdiff, and 'plain' corresponding to git_commitdiff_plain) specified in argument. Separate patch (diff) pretty-printing into git_patchset_body. It is used in git_commitdiff. Separate patch (diff) line formatting from git_diff_print into format_diff_line function. It is used in git_patchset_body. While at it, add $hash parameter to git_difftree_body, according to rule that inner functions should use parameter passing, and not global variables. CHANGES TO OUTPUT: * "commitdiff" now products patches with renaming and copying detection (git-diff-tree is invoked with -M and -C options). Empty patches (mode changes and pure renames and copying) are not written currently. Former version broke renaming and copying, and didn't notice mode changes, like this version. * "commitdiff" output is now divided into several div elements of class "log", "patchset" and "patch". * "commitdiff_plain" now only generates X-Git-Tag: line only if there is tag pointing to the current commit. Former version which wrote first tag following current commit was broken[*1*]; besides we are interested rather in tags _preceding_ the commit, and _heads_ following the commit. X-Git-Url: now is current URL; former version tried[*2*] to output URL to HTML version of commitdiff. * "commitdiff_plain" is generated by git-diff-tree, and has therefore has git specific extensions to diff format: "git diff" header and optional extended header lines. FOOTNOTES [*1*] First it generated rev-list starting from HEAD even if hash_base parameter was set, second it wasn't corrected according to changes made in git_get_references (formerly read_info_ref) output, third even for older version of read_info_ref output it didn't work for multiple tags pointing to the current commit (rare). [*2*] It wrote URL for commitdiff without hash_parent, which produces diff to first parent and is not the same as current diff if it is diff of merge commit to non-first parent. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
} elsif ($format eq 'plain') {
my $refs = git_get_references("tags");
my $tagname = git_get_rev_name_tags($hash);
gitweb: Use git-diff-tree patch output for commitdiff Get rid of git_diff_print invocation in git_commitdiff and therefore external diff (/usr/bin/diff) invocation, and use only git-diff-tree to generate patch. git_commitdiff and git_commitdiff_plain are collapsed into one subroutine git_commitdiff, with format (currently 'html' which is default format corresponding to git_commitdiff, and 'plain' corresponding to git_commitdiff_plain) specified in argument. Separate patch (diff) pretty-printing into git_patchset_body. It is used in git_commitdiff. Separate patch (diff) line formatting from git_diff_print into format_diff_line function. It is used in git_patchset_body. While at it, add $hash parameter to git_difftree_body, according to rule that inner functions should use parameter passing, and not global variables. CHANGES TO OUTPUT: * "commitdiff" now products patches with renaming and copying detection (git-diff-tree is invoked with -M and -C options). Empty patches (mode changes and pure renames and copying) are not written currently. Former version broke renaming and copying, and didn't notice mode changes, like this version. * "commitdiff" output is now divided into several div elements of class "log", "patchset" and "patch". * "commitdiff_plain" now only generates X-Git-Tag: line only if there is tag pointing to the current commit. Former version which wrote first tag following current commit was broken[*1*]; besides we are interested rather in tags _preceding_ the commit, and _heads_ following the commit. X-Git-Url: now is current URL; former version tried[*2*] to output URL to HTML version of commitdiff. * "commitdiff_plain" is generated by git-diff-tree, and has therefore has git specific extensions to diff format: "git diff" header and optional extended header lines. FOOTNOTES [*1*] First it generated rev-list starting from HEAD even if hash_base parameter was set, second it wasn't corrected according to changes made in git_get_references (formerly read_info_ref) output, third even for older version of read_info_ref output it didn't work for multiple tags pointing to the current commit (rare). [*2*] It wrote URL for commitdiff without hash_parent, which produces diff to first parent and is not the same as current diff if it is diff of merge commit to non-first parent. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
my $filename = basename($project) . "-$hash.patch";
print $cgi->header(
-type => 'text/plain',
-charset => 'utf-8',
-expires => $expires,
-content_disposition => 'inline; filename="' . "$filename" . '"');
gitweb: Use git-diff-tree patch output for commitdiff Get rid of git_diff_print invocation in git_commitdiff and therefore external diff (/usr/bin/diff) invocation, and use only git-diff-tree to generate patch. git_commitdiff and git_commitdiff_plain are collapsed into one subroutine git_commitdiff, with format (currently 'html' which is default format corresponding to git_commitdiff, and 'plain' corresponding to git_commitdiff_plain) specified in argument. Separate patch (diff) pretty-printing into git_patchset_body. It is used in git_commitdiff. Separate patch (diff) line formatting from git_diff_print into format_diff_line function. It is used in git_patchset_body. While at it, add $hash parameter to git_difftree_body, according to rule that inner functions should use parameter passing, and not global variables. CHANGES TO OUTPUT: * "commitdiff" now products patches with renaming and copying detection (git-diff-tree is invoked with -M and -C options). Empty patches (mode changes and pure renames and copying) are not written currently. Former version broke renaming and copying, and didn't notice mode changes, like this version. * "commitdiff" output is now divided into several div elements of class "log", "patchset" and "patch". * "commitdiff_plain" now only generates X-Git-Tag: line only if there is tag pointing to the current commit. Former version which wrote first tag following current commit was broken[*1*]; besides we are interested rather in tags _preceding_ the commit, and _heads_ following the commit. X-Git-Url: now is current URL; former version tried[*2*] to output URL to HTML version of commitdiff. * "commitdiff_plain" is generated by git-diff-tree, and has therefore has git specific extensions to diff format: "git diff" header and optional extended header lines. FOOTNOTES [*1*] First it generated rev-list starting from HEAD even if hash_base parameter was set, second it wasn't corrected according to changes made in git_get_references (formerly read_info_ref) output, third even for older version of read_info_ref output it didn't work for multiple tags pointing to the current commit (rare). [*2*] It wrote URL for commitdiff without hash_parent, which produces diff to first parent and is not the same as current diff if it is diff of merge commit to non-first parent. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
my %ad = parse_date($co{'author_epoch'}, $co{'author_tz'});
print "From: " . to_utf8($co{'author'}) . "\n";
print "Date: $ad{'rfc2822'} ($ad{'tz_local'})\n";
print "Subject: " . to_utf8($co{'title'}) . "\n";
print "X-Git-Tag: $tagname\n" if $tagname;
gitweb: Use git-diff-tree patch output for commitdiff Get rid of git_diff_print invocation in git_commitdiff and therefore external diff (/usr/bin/diff) invocation, and use only git-diff-tree to generate patch. git_commitdiff and git_commitdiff_plain are collapsed into one subroutine git_commitdiff, with format (currently 'html' which is default format corresponding to git_commitdiff, and 'plain' corresponding to git_commitdiff_plain) specified in argument. Separate patch (diff) pretty-printing into git_patchset_body. It is used in git_commitdiff. Separate patch (diff) line formatting from git_diff_print into format_diff_line function. It is used in git_patchset_body. While at it, add $hash parameter to git_difftree_body, according to rule that inner functions should use parameter passing, and not global variables. CHANGES TO OUTPUT: * "commitdiff" now products patches with renaming and copying detection (git-diff-tree is invoked with -M and -C options). Empty patches (mode changes and pure renames and copying) are not written currently. Former version broke renaming and copying, and didn't notice mode changes, like this version. * "commitdiff" output is now divided into several div elements of class "log", "patchset" and "patch". * "commitdiff_plain" now only generates X-Git-Tag: line only if there is tag pointing to the current commit. Former version which wrote first tag following current commit was broken[*1*]; besides we are interested rather in tags _preceding_ the commit, and _heads_ following the commit. X-Git-Url: now is current URL; former version tried[*2*] to output URL to HTML version of commitdiff. * "commitdiff_plain" is generated by git-diff-tree, and has therefore has git specific extensions to diff format: "git diff" header and optional extended header lines. FOOTNOTES [*1*] First it generated rev-list starting from HEAD even if hash_base parameter was set, second it wasn't corrected according to changes made in git_get_references (formerly read_info_ref) output, third even for older version of read_info_ref output it didn't work for multiple tags pointing to the current commit (rare). [*2*] It wrote URL for commitdiff without hash_parent, which produces diff to first parent and is not the same as current diff if it is diff of merge commit to non-first parent. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
print "X-Git-Url: " . $cgi->self_url() . "\n\n";
gitweb: Use git-diff-tree patch output for commitdiff Get rid of git_diff_print invocation in git_commitdiff and therefore external diff (/usr/bin/diff) invocation, and use only git-diff-tree to generate patch. git_commitdiff and git_commitdiff_plain are collapsed into one subroutine git_commitdiff, with format (currently 'html' which is default format corresponding to git_commitdiff, and 'plain' corresponding to git_commitdiff_plain) specified in argument. Separate patch (diff) pretty-printing into git_patchset_body. It is used in git_commitdiff. Separate patch (diff) line formatting from git_diff_print into format_diff_line function. It is used in git_patchset_body. While at it, add $hash parameter to git_difftree_body, according to rule that inner functions should use parameter passing, and not global variables. CHANGES TO OUTPUT: * "commitdiff" now products patches with renaming and copying detection (git-diff-tree is invoked with -M and -C options). Empty patches (mode changes and pure renames and copying) are not written currently. Former version broke renaming and copying, and didn't notice mode changes, like this version. * "commitdiff" output is now divided into several div elements of class "log", "patchset" and "patch". * "commitdiff_plain" now only generates X-Git-Tag: line only if there is tag pointing to the current commit. Former version which wrote first tag following current commit was broken[*1*]; besides we are interested rather in tags _preceding_ the commit, and _heads_ following the commit. X-Git-Url: now is current URL; former version tried[*2*] to output URL to HTML version of commitdiff. * "commitdiff_plain" is generated by git-diff-tree, and has therefore has git specific extensions to diff format: "git diff" header and optional extended header lines. FOOTNOTES [*1*] First it generated rev-list starting from HEAD even if hash_base parameter was set, second it wasn't corrected according to changes made in git_get_references (formerly read_info_ref) output, third even for older version of read_info_ref output it didn't work for multiple tags pointing to the current commit (rare). [*2*] It wrote URL for commitdiff without hash_parent, which produces diff to first parent and is not the same as current diff if it is diff of merge commit to non-first parent. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
foreach my $line (@{$co{'comment'}}) {
print to_utf8($line) . "\n";
gitweb: Use git-diff-tree patch output for commitdiff Get rid of git_diff_print invocation in git_commitdiff and therefore external diff (/usr/bin/diff) invocation, and use only git-diff-tree to generate patch. git_commitdiff and git_commitdiff_plain are collapsed into one subroutine git_commitdiff, with format (currently 'html' which is default format corresponding to git_commitdiff, and 'plain' corresponding to git_commitdiff_plain) specified in argument. Separate patch (diff) pretty-printing into git_patchset_body. It is used in git_commitdiff. Separate patch (diff) line formatting from git_diff_print into format_diff_line function. It is used in git_patchset_body. While at it, add $hash parameter to git_difftree_body, according to rule that inner functions should use parameter passing, and not global variables. CHANGES TO OUTPUT: * "commitdiff" now products patches with renaming and copying detection (git-diff-tree is invoked with -M and -C options). Empty patches (mode changes and pure renames and copying) are not written currently. Former version broke renaming and copying, and didn't notice mode changes, like this version. * "commitdiff" output is now divided into several div elements of class "log", "patchset" and "patch". * "commitdiff_plain" now only generates X-Git-Tag: line only if there is tag pointing to the current commit. Former version which wrote first tag following current commit was broken[*1*]; besides we are interested rather in tags _preceding_ the commit, and _heads_ following the commit. X-Git-Url: now is current URL; former version tried[*2*] to output URL to HTML version of commitdiff. * "commitdiff_plain" is generated by git-diff-tree, and has therefore has git specific extensions to diff format: "git diff" header and optional extended header lines. FOOTNOTES [*1*] First it generated rev-list starting from HEAD even if hash_base parameter was set, second it wasn't corrected according to changes made in git_get_references (formerly read_info_ref) output, third even for older version of read_info_ref output it didn't work for multiple tags pointing to the current commit (rare). [*2*] It wrote URL for commitdiff without hash_parent, which produces diff to first parent and is not the same as current diff if it is diff of merge commit to non-first parent. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
}
print "---\n\n";
20 years ago
}
gitweb: Use git-diff-tree patch output for commitdiff Get rid of git_diff_print invocation in git_commitdiff and therefore external diff (/usr/bin/diff) invocation, and use only git-diff-tree to generate patch. git_commitdiff and git_commitdiff_plain are collapsed into one subroutine git_commitdiff, with format (currently 'html' which is default format corresponding to git_commitdiff, and 'plain' corresponding to git_commitdiff_plain) specified in argument. Separate patch (diff) pretty-printing into git_patchset_body. It is used in git_commitdiff. Separate patch (diff) line formatting from git_diff_print into format_diff_line function. It is used in git_patchset_body. While at it, add $hash parameter to git_difftree_body, according to rule that inner functions should use parameter passing, and not global variables. CHANGES TO OUTPUT: * "commitdiff" now products patches with renaming and copying detection (git-diff-tree is invoked with -M and -C options). Empty patches (mode changes and pure renames and copying) are not written currently. Former version broke renaming and copying, and didn't notice mode changes, like this version. * "commitdiff" output is now divided into several div elements of class "log", "patchset" and "patch". * "commitdiff_plain" now only generates X-Git-Tag: line only if there is tag pointing to the current commit. Former version which wrote first tag following current commit was broken[*1*]; besides we are interested rather in tags _preceding_ the commit, and _heads_ following the commit. X-Git-Url: now is current URL; former version tried[*2*] to output URL to HTML version of commitdiff. * "commitdiff_plain" is generated by git-diff-tree, and has therefore has git specific extensions to diff format: "git diff" header and optional extended header lines. FOOTNOTES [*1*] First it generated rev-list starting from HEAD even if hash_base parameter was set, second it wasn't corrected according to changes made in git_get_references (formerly read_info_ref) output, third even for older version of read_info_ref output it didn't work for multiple tags pointing to the current commit (rare). [*2*] It wrote URL for commitdiff without hash_parent, which produces diff to first parent and is not the same as current diff if it is diff of merge commit to non-first parent. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
# write patch
if ($format eq 'html') {
my $use_parents = !defined $hash_parent ||
$hash_parent eq '-c' || $hash_parent eq '--cc';
git_difftree_body(\@difftree, $hash,
$use_parents ? @{$co{'parents'}} : $hash_parent);
print "<br/>\n";
20 years ago
git_patchset_body($fd, \@difftree, $hash,
$use_parents ? @{$co{'parents'}} : $hash_parent);
close $fd;
gitweb: Use git-diff-tree patch output for commitdiff Get rid of git_diff_print invocation in git_commitdiff and therefore external diff (/usr/bin/diff) invocation, and use only git-diff-tree to generate patch. git_commitdiff and git_commitdiff_plain are collapsed into one subroutine git_commitdiff, with format (currently 'html' which is default format corresponding to git_commitdiff, and 'plain' corresponding to git_commitdiff_plain) specified in argument. Separate patch (diff) pretty-printing into git_patchset_body. It is used in git_commitdiff. Separate patch (diff) line formatting from git_diff_print into format_diff_line function. It is used in git_patchset_body. While at it, add $hash parameter to git_difftree_body, according to rule that inner functions should use parameter passing, and not global variables. CHANGES TO OUTPUT: * "commitdiff" now products patches with renaming and copying detection (git-diff-tree is invoked with -M and -C options). Empty patches (mode changes and pure renames and copying) are not written currently. Former version broke renaming and copying, and didn't notice mode changes, like this version. * "commitdiff" output is now divided into several div elements of class "log", "patchset" and "patch". * "commitdiff_plain" now only generates X-Git-Tag: line only if there is tag pointing to the current commit. Former version which wrote first tag following current commit was broken[*1*]; besides we are interested rather in tags _preceding_ the commit, and _heads_ following the commit. X-Git-Url: now is current URL; former version tried[*2*] to output URL to HTML version of commitdiff. * "commitdiff_plain" is generated by git-diff-tree, and has therefore has git specific extensions to diff format: "git diff" header and optional extended header lines. FOOTNOTES [*1*] First it generated rev-list starting from HEAD even if hash_base parameter was set, second it wasn't corrected according to changes made in git_get_references (formerly read_info_ref) output, third even for older version of read_info_ref output it didn't work for multiple tags pointing to the current commit (rare). [*2*] It wrote URL for commitdiff without hash_parent, which produces diff to first parent and is not the same as current diff if it is diff of merge commit to non-first parent. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
print "</div>\n"; # class="page_body"
git_footer_html();
} elsif ($format eq 'plain') {
local $/ = undef;
print <$fd>;
close $fd
or print "Reading git-diff-tree failed\n";
20 years ago
}
}
gitweb: Use git-diff-tree patch output for commitdiff Get rid of git_diff_print invocation in git_commitdiff and therefore external diff (/usr/bin/diff) invocation, and use only git-diff-tree to generate patch. git_commitdiff and git_commitdiff_plain are collapsed into one subroutine git_commitdiff, with format (currently 'html' which is default format corresponding to git_commitdiff, and 'plain' corresponding to git_commitdiff_plain) specified in argument. Separate patch (diff) pretty-printing into git_patchset_body. It is used in git_commitdiff. Separate patch (diff) line formatting from git_diff_print into format_diff_line function. It is used in git_patchset_body. While at it, add $hash parameter to git_difftree_body, according to rule that inner functions should use parameter passing, and not global variables. CHANGES TO OUTPUT: * "commitdiff" now products patches with renaming and copying detection (git-diff-tree is invoked with -M and -C options). Empty patches (mode changes and pure renames and copying) are not written currently. Former version broke renaming and copying, and didn't notice mode changes, like this version. * "commitdiff" output is now divided into several div elements of class "log", "patchset" and "patch". * "commitdiff_plain" now only generates X-Git-Tag: line only if there is tag pointing to the current commit. Former version which wrote first tag following current commit was broken[*1*]; besides we are interested rather in tags _preceding_ the commit, and _heads_ following the commit. X-Git-Url: now is current URL; former version tried[*2*] to output URL to HTML version of commitdiff. * "commitdiff_plain" is generated by git-diff-tree, and has therefore has git specific extensions to diff format: "git diff" header and optional extended header lines. FOOTNOTES [*1*] First it generated rev-list starting from HEAD even if hash_base parameter was set, second it wasn't corrected according to changes made in git_get_references (formerly read_info_ref) output, third even for older version of read_info_ref output it didn't work for multiple tags pointing to the current commit (rare). [*2*] It wrote URL for commitdiff without hash_parent, which produces diff to first parent and is not the same as current diff if it is diff of merge commit to non-first parent. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
sub git_commitdiff_plain {
git_commitdiff('plain');
}
20 years ago
sub git_history {
if (!defined $hash_base) {
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
$hash_base = git_get_head_hash($project);
20 years ago
}
if (!defined $page) {
$page = 0;
}
my $ftype;
my %co = parse_commit($hash_base)
or die_error(404, "Unknown commit object");
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
my $refs = git_get_references();
my $limit = sprintf("--max-count=%i", (100 * ($page+1)));
my @commitlist = parse_commits($hash_base, 101, (100 * $page),
$file_name, "--full-history")
or die_error(404, "No such file or directory on given branch");
if (!defined $hash && defined $file_name) {
# some commits could have deleted file in question,
# and not have it in tree, but one of them has to have it
for (my $i = 0; $i <= @commitlist; $i++) {
$hash = git_get_hash_by_path($commitlist[$i]{'id'}, $file_name);
last if defined $hash;
}
}
if (defined $hash) {
$ftype = git_get_type($hash);
}
if (!defined $ftype) {
die_error(500, "Unknown type of object");
}
my $paging_nav = '';
if ($page > 0) {
$paging_nav .=
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"history", hash=>$hash, hash_base=>$hash_base,
file_name=>$file_name)},
"first");
$paging_nav .= " &sdot; " .
$cgi->a({-href => href(-replay=>1, page=>$page-1),
-accesskey => "p", -title => "Alt-p"}, "prev");
} else {
$paging_nav .= "first";
$paging_nav .= " &sdot; prev";
}
my $next_link = '';
if ($#commitlist >= 100) {
$next_link =
$cgi->a({-href => href(-replay=>1, page=>$page+1),
-accesskey => "n", -title => "Alt-n"}, "next");
$paging_nav .= " &sdot; $next_link";
} else {
$paging_nav .= " &sdot; next";
}
git_header_html();
git_print_page_nav('history','', $hash_base,$co{'tree'},$hash_base, $paging_nav);
git_print_header_div('commit', esc_html($co{'title'}), $hash_base);
git_print_page_path($file_name, $ftype, $hash_base);
git_history_body(\@commitlist, 0, 99,
$refs, $hash_base, $ftype, $next_link);
20 years ago
git_footer_html();
}
20 years ago
sub git_search {
gitweb_check_feature('search') or die_error(403, "Search is disabled");
20 years ago
if (!defined $searchtext) {
die_error(400, "Text field is empty");
20 years ago
}
if (!defined $hash) {
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
$hash = git_get_head_hash($project);
20 years ago
}
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
my %co = parse_commit($hash);
20 years ago
if (!%co) {
die_error(404, "Unknown commit object");
20 years ago
}
if (!defined $page) {
$page = 0;
}
$searchtype ||= 'commit';
if ($searchtype eq 'pickaxe') {
# pickaxe may take all resources of your box and run for several minutes
# with every query - so decide by yourself how public you make this feature
gitweb_check_feature('pickaxe')
or die_error(403, "Pickaxe is disabled");
20 years ago
}
if ($searchtype eq 'grep') {
gitweb_check_feature('grep')
or die_error(403, "Grep is disabled");
}
20 years ago
git_header_html();
if ($searchtype eq 'commit' or $searchtype eq 'author' or $searchtype eq 'committer') {
my $greptype;
if ($searchtype eq 'commit') {
$greptype = "--grep=";
} elsif ($searchtype eq 'author') {
$greptype = "--author=";
} elsif ($searchtype eq 'committer') {
$greptype = "--committer=";
}
$greptype .= $searchtext;
my @commitlist = parse_commits($hash, 101, (100 * $page), undef,
$greptype, '--regexp-ignore-case',
$search_use_regexp ? '--extended-regexp' : '--fixed-strings');
my $paging_nav = '';
if ($page > 0) {
$paging_nav .=
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"search", hash=>$hash,
searchtext=>$searchtext,
searchtype=>$searchtype)},
"first");
$paging_nav .= " &sdot; " .
$cgi->a({-href => href(-replay=>1, page=>$page-1),
-accesskey => "p", -title => "Alt-p"}, "prev");
} else {
$paging_nav .= "first";
$paging_nav .= " &sdot; prev";
}
my $next_link = '';
if ($#commitlist >= 100) {
$next_link =
$cgi->a({-href => href(-replay=>1, page=>$page+1),
-accesskey => "n", -title => "Alt-n"}, "next");
$paging_nav .= " &sdot; $next_link";
} else {
$paging_nav .= " &sdot; next";
}
if ($#commitlist >= 100) {
}
git_print_page_nav('','', $hash,$co{'tree'},$hash, $paging_nav);
git_print_header_div('commit', esc_html($co{'title'}), $hash);
git_search_grep_body(\@commitlist, 0, 99, $next_link);
20 years ago
}
if ($searchtype eq 'pickaxe') {
git_print_page_nav('','', $hash,$co{'tree'},$hash);
git_print_header_div('commit', esc_html($co{'title'}), $hash);
print "<table class=\"pickaxe search\">\n";
my $alternate = 1;
20 years ago
$/ = "\n";
open my $fd, '-|', git_cmd(), '--no-pager', 'log', @diff_opts,
'--pretty=format:%H', '--no-abbrev', '--raw', "-S$searchtext",
($search_use_regexp ? '--pickaxe-regex' : ());
20 years ago
undef %co;
my @files;
while (my $line = <$fd>) {
chomp $line;
next unless $line;
my %set = parse_difftree_raw_line($line);
if (defined $set{'commit'}) {
# finish previous commit
20 years ago
if (%co) {
print "</td>\n" .
"<td class=\"link\">" .
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"commit", hash=>$co{'id'})}, "commit") .
" | " .
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"tree", hash=>$co{'tree'}, hash_base=>$co{'id'})}, "tree");
20 years ago
print "</td>\n" .
"</tr>\n";
}
if ($alternate) {
print "<tr class=\"dark\">\n";
} else {
print "<tr class=\"light\">\n";
}
$alternate ^= 1;
%co = parse_commit($set{'commit'});
my $author = chop_and_escape_str($co{'author_name'}, 15, 5);
print "<td title=\"$co{'age_string_age'}\"><i>$co{'age_string_date'}</i></td>\n" .
"<td><i>$author</i></td>\n" .
"<td>" .
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"commit", hash=>$co{'id'}),
-class => "list subject"},
chop_and_escape_str($co{'title'}, 50) . "<br/>");
} elsif (defined $set{'to_id'}) {
next if ($set{'to_id'} =~ m/^0{40}$/);
print $cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"blob", hash_base=>$co{'id'},
hash=>$set{'to_id'}, file_name=>$set{'to_file'}),
-class => "list"},
"<span class=\"match\">" . esc_path($set{'file'}) . "</span>") .
"<br/>\n";
20 years ago
}
}
20 years ago
close $fd;
# finish last commit (warning: repetition!)
if (%co) {
print "</td>\n" .
"<td class=\"link\">" .
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"commit", hash=>$co{'id'})}, "commit") .
" | " .
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"tree", hash=>$co{'tree'}, hash_base=>$co{'id'})}, "tree");
print "</td>\n" .
"</tr>\n";
}
print "</table>\n";
20 years ago
}
if ($searchtype eq 'grep') {
git_print_page_nav('','', $hash,$co{'tree'},$hash);
git_print_header_div('commit', esc_html($co{'title'}), $hash);
print "<table class=\"grep_search\">\n";
my $alternate = 1;
my $matches = 0;
$/ = "\n";
open my $fd, "-|", git_cmd(), 'grep', '-n',
$search_use_regexp ? ('-E', '-i') : '-F',
$searchtext, $co{'tree'};
my $lastfile = '';
while (my $line = <$fd>) {
chomp $line;
my ($file, $lno, $ltext, $binary);
last if ($matches++ > 1000);
if ($line =~ /^Binary file (.+) matches$/) {
$file = $1;
$binary = 1;
} else {
(undef, $file, $lno, $ltext) = split(/:/, $line, 4);
}
if ($file ne $lastfile) {
$lastfile and print "</td></tr>\n";
if ($alternate++) {
print "<tr class=\"dark\">\n";
} else {
print "<tr class=\"light\">\n";
}
print "<td class=\"list\">".
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"blob", hash=>$co{'hash'},
file_name=>"$file"),
-class => "list"}, esc_path($file));
print "</td><td>\n";
$lastfile = $file;
}
if ($binary) {
print "<div class=\"binary\">Binary file</div>\n";
} else {
$ltext = untabify($ltext);
if ($ltext =~ m/^(.*)($search_regexp)(.*)$/i) {
$ltext = esc_html($1, -nbsp=>1);
$ltext .= '<span class="match">';
$ltext .= esc_html($2, -nbsp=>1);
$ltext .= '</span>';
$ltext .= esc_html($3, -nbsp=>1);
} else {
$ltext = esc_html($ltext, -nbsp=>1);
}
print "<div class=\"pre\">" .
$cgi->a({-href => href(action=>"blob", hash=>$co{'hash'},
file_name=>"$file").'#l'.$lno,
-class => "linenr"}, sprintf('%4i', $lno))
. ' ' . $ltext . "</div>\n";
}
}
if ($lastfile) {
print "</td></tr>\n";
if ($matches > 1000) {
print "<div class=\"diff nodifferences\">Too many matches, listing trimmed</div>\n";
}
} else {
print "<div class=\"diff nodifferences\">No matches found</div>\n";
}
close $fd;
print "</table>\n";
}
20 years ago
git_footer_html();
}
sub git_search_help {
git_header_html();
git_print_page_nav('','', $hash,$hash,$hash);
print <<EOT;
<p><strong>Pattern</strong> is by default a normal string that is matched precisely (but without
regard to case, except in the case of pickaxe). However, when you check the <em>re</em> checkbox,
the pattern entered is recognized as the POSIX extended
<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regular_expression">regular expression</a> (also case
insensitive).</p>
<dl>
<dt><b>commit</b></dt>
<dd>The commit messages and authorship information will be scanned for the given pattern.</dd>
EOT
my $have_grep = gitweb_check_feature('grep');
if ($have_grep) {
print <<EOT;
<dt><b>grep</b></dt>
<dd>All files in the currently selected tree (HEAD unless you are explicitly browsing
a different one) are searched for the given pattern. On large trees, this search can take
a while and put some strain on the server, so please use it with some consideration. Note that
due to git-grep peculiarity, currently if regexp mode is turned off, the matches are
case-sensitive.</dd>
EOT
}
print <<EOT;
<dt><b>author</b></dt>
<dd>Name and e-mail of the change author and date of birth of the patch will be scanned for the given pattern.</dd>
<dt><b>committer</b></dt>
<dd>Name and e-mail of the committer and date of commit will be scanned for the given pattern.</dd>
EOT
my $have_pickaxe = gitweb_check_feature('pickaxe');
if ($have_pickaxe) {
print <<EOT;
<dt><b>pickaxe</b></dt>
<dd>All commits that caused the string to appear or disappear from any file (changes that
added, removed or "modified" the string) will be listed. This search can take a while and
takes a lot of strain on the server, so please use it wisely. Note that since you may be
interested even in changes just changing the case as well, this search is case sensitive.</dd>
EOT
}
print "</dl>\n";
git_footer_html();
}
20 years ago
sub git_shortlog {
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
my $head = git_get_head_hash($project);
20 years ago
if (!defined $hash) {
$hash = $head;
}
20 years ago
if (!defined $page) {
$page = 0;
}
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
my $refs = git_get_references();
20 years ago
my $commit_hash = $hash;
if (defined $hash_parent) {
$commit_hash = "$hash_parent..$hash";
}
my @commitlist = parse_commits($commit_hash, 101, (100 * $page));
20 years ago
my $paging_nav = format_paging_nav('shortlog', $hash, $head, $page, $#commitlist >= 100);
my $next_link = '';
if ($#commitlist >= 100) {
$next_link =
$cgi->a({-href => href(-replay=>1, page=>$page+1),
-accesskey => "n", -title => "Alt-n"}, "next");
}
git_header_html();
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
git_print_page_nav('shortlog','', $hash,$hash,$hash, $paging_nav);
git_print_header_div('summary', $project);
git_shortlog_body(\@commitlist, 0, 99, $refs, $next_link);
20 years ago
git_footer_html();
}
## ......................................................................
gitweb: Refactor feed generation, make output prettier, add Atom feed Add support for more modern Atom web feed format. Both RSS and Atom feeds are generated by git_feed subroutine to avoid code duplication; git_rss and git_atom are thin wrappers around git_feed. Add links to Atom feed in HTML header and in page footer (but not in OPML; we should use APP, Atom Publishing Proptocol instead). Allow for feed generation for branches other than current (HEAD) branch, and for generation of feeds for file or directory history. Do not use "pre ${\sub_returning_scalar(...)} post" trick, but join strings instead: "pre " . sub_returning_scalar(...) . " post". Use href(-full=>1, ...) instead of hand-crafting gitweb urls. Make output prettier: * Use title similar to the title of web page * Use project description (if exists) for description/subtitle * Do not add anything (committer name, commit date) to feed entry title * Wrap the commit message in <pre> * Make file names into an unordered list * Add links (diff, conditional blame, history) to the file list. In addition to the above points, the attached patch emits a Last-Changed: HTTP response header field, and doesn't compute the feed body if the HTTP request type was HEAD. This helps keep the web server load down for well-behaved feed readers that check if the feed needs updating. If browser (feed reader) sent Accept: header, and it prefers 'text/xml' type to 'application/rss+xml' (in the case of RSS feed) or 'application/atom+xml' (in the case of Atom feed), then use 'text/xml' as content type. Both RSS and Atom feeds validate at http://feedvalidator.org and at http://validator.w3.org/feed/ Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Andreas Fuchs <asf@boinkor.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
## feeds (RSS, Atom; OPML)
gitweb: Refactor feed generation, make output prettier, add Atom feed Add support for more modern Atom web feed format. Both RSS and Atom feeds are generated by git_feed subroutine to avoid code duplication; git_rss and git_atom are thin wrappers around git_feed. Add links to Atom feed in HTML header and in page footer (but not in OPML; we should use APP, Atom Publishing Proptocol instead). Allow for feed generation for branches other than current (HEAD) branch, and for generation of feeds for file or directory history. Do not use "pre ${\sub_returning_scalar(...)} post" trick, but join strings instead: "pre " . sub_returning_scalar(...) . " post". Use href(-full=>1, ...) instead of hand-crafting gitweb urls. Make output prettier: * Use title similar to the title of web page * Use project description (if exists) for description/subtitle * Do not add anything (committer name, commit date) to feed entry title * Wrap the commit message in <pre> * Make file names into an unordered list * Add links (diff, conditional blame, history) to the file list. In addition to the above points, the attached patch emits a Last-Changed: HTTP response header field, and doesn't compute the feed body if the HTTP request type was HEAD. This helps keep the web server load down for well-behaved feed readers that check if the feed needs updating. If browser (feed reader) sent Accept: header, and it prefers 'text/xml' type to 'application/rss+xml' (in the case of RSS feed) or 'application/atom+xml' (in the case of Atom feed), then use 'text/xml' as content type. Both RSS and Atom feeds validate at http://feedvalidator.org and at http://validator.w3.org/feed/ Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Andreas Fuchs <asf@boinkor.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
sub git_feed {
my $format = shift || 'atom';
my $have_blame = gitweb_check_feature('blame');
gitweb: Refactor feed generation, make output prettier, add Atom feed Add support for more modern Atom web feed format. Both RSS and Atom feeds are generated by git_feed subroutine to avoid code duplication; git_rss and git_atom are thin wrappers around git_feed. Add links to Atom feed in HTML header and in page footer (but not in OPML; we should use APP, Atom Publishing Proptocol instead). Allow for feed generation for branches other than current (HEAD) branch, and for generation of feeds for file or directory history. Do not use "pre ${\sub_returning_scalar(...)} post" trick, but join strings instead: "pre " . sub_returning_scalar(...) . " post". Use href(-full=>1, ...) instead of hand-crafting gitweb urls. Make output prettier: * Use title similar to the title of web page * Use project description (if exists) for description/subtitle * Do not add anything (committer name, commit date) to feed entry title * Wrap the commit message in <pre> * Make file names into an unordered list * Add links (diff, conditional blame, history) to the file list. In addition to the above points, the attached patch emits a Last-Changed: HTTP response header field, and doesn't compute the feed body if the HTTP request type was HEAD. This helps keep the web server load down for well-behaved feed readers that check if the feed needs updating. If browser (feed reader) sent Accept: header, and it prefers 'text/xml' type to 'application/rss+xml' (in the case of RSS feed) or 'application/atom+xml' (in the case of Atom feed), then use 'text/xml' as content type. Both RSS and Atom feeds validate at http://feedvalidator.org and at http://validator.w3.org/feed/ Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Andreas Fuchs <asf@boinkor.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
# Atom: http://www.atomenabled.org/developers/syndication/
# RSS: http://www.notestips.com/80256B3A007F2692/1/NAMO5P9UPQ
if ($format ne 'rss' && $format ne 'atom') {
die_error(400, "Unknown web feed format");
gitweb: Refactor feed generation, make output prettier, add Atom feed Add support for more modern Atom web feed format. Both RSS and Atom feeds are generated by git_feed subroutine to avoid code duplication; git_rss and git_atom are thin wrappers around git_feed. Add links to Atom feed in HTML header and in page footer (but not in OPML; we should use APP, Atom Publishing Proptocol instead). Allow for feed generation for branches other than current (HEAD) branch, and for generation of feeds for file or directory history. Do not use "pre ${\sub_returning_scalar(...)} post" trick, but join strings instead: "pre " . sub_returning_scalar(...) . " post". Use href(-full=>1, ...) instead of hand-crafting gitweb urls. Make output prettier: * Use title similar to the title of web page * Use project description (if exists) for description/subtitle * Do not add anything (committer name, commit date) to feed entry title * Wrap the commit message in <pre> * Make file names into an unordered list * Add links (diff, conditional blame, history) to the file list. In addition to the above points, the attached patch emits a Last-Changed: HTTP response header field, and doesn't compute the feed body if the HTTP request type was HEAD. This helps keep the web server load down for well-behaved feed readers that check if the feed needs updating. If browser (feed reader) sent Accept: header, and it prefers 'text/xml' type to 'application/rss+xml' (in the case of RSS feed) or 'application/atom+xml' (in the case of Atom feed), then use 'text/xml' as content type. Both RSS and Atom feeds validate at http://feedvalidator.org and at http://validator.w3.org/feed/ Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Andreas Fuchs <asf@boinkor.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
}
# log/feed of current (HEAD) branch, log of given branch, history of file/directory
my $head = $hash || 'HEAD';
my @commitlist = parse_commits($head, 150, 0, $file_name);
gitweb: Refactor feed generation, make output prettier, add Atom feed Add support for more modern Atom web feed format. Both RSS and Atom feeds are generated by git_feed subroutine to avoid code duplication; git_rss and git_atom are thin wrappers around git_feed. Add links to Atom feed in HTML header and in page footer (but not in OPML; we should use APP, Atom Publishing Proptocol instead). Allow for feed generation for branches other than current (HEAD) branch, and for generation of feeds for file or directory history. Do not use "pre ${\sub_returning_scalar(...)} post" trick, but join strings instead: "pre " . sub_returning_scalar(...) . " post". Use href(-full=>1, ...) instead of hand-crafting gitweb urls. Make output prettier: * Use title similar to the title of web page * Use project description (if exists) for description/subtitle * Do not add anything (committer name, commit date) to feed entry title * Wrap the commit message in <pre> * Make file names into an unordered list * Add links (diff, conditional blame, history) to the file list. In addition to the above points, the attached patch emits a Last-Changed: HTTP response header field, and doesn't compute the feed body if the HTTP request type was HEAD. This helps keep the web server load down for well-behaved feed readers that check if the feed needs updating. If browser (feed reader) sent Accept: header, and it prefers 'text/xml' type to 'application/rss+xml' (in the case of RSS feed) or 'application/atom+xml' (in the case of Atom feed), then use 'text/xml' as content type. Both RSS and Atom feeds validate at http://feedvalidator.org and at http://validator.w3.org/feed/ Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Andreas Fuchs <asf@boinkor.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
my %latest_commit;
my %latest_date;
my $content_type = "application/$format+xml";
if (defined $cgi->http('HTTP_ACCEPT') &&
$cgi->Accept('text/xml') > $cgi->Accept($content_type)) {
# browser (feed reader) prefers text/xml
$content_type = 'text/xml';
}
if (defined($commitlist[0])) {
%latest_commit = %{$commitlist[0]};
%latest_date = parse_date($latest_commit{'author_epoch'});
gitweb: Refactor feed generation, make output prettier, add Atom feed Add support for more modern Atom web feed format. Both RSS and Atom feeds are generated by git_feed subroutine to avoid code duplication; git_rss and git_atom are thin wrappers around git_feed. Add links to Atom feed in HTML header and in page footer (but not in OPML; we should use APP, Atom Publishing Proptocol instead). Allow for feed generation for branches other than current (HEAD) branch, and for generation of feeds for file or directory history. Do not use "pre ${\sub_returning_scalar(...)} post" trick, but join strings instead: "pre " . sub_returning_scalar(...) . " post". Use href(-full=>1, ...) instead of hand-crafting gitweb urls. Make output prettier: * Use title similar to the title of web page * Use project description (if exists) for description/subtitle * Do not add anything (committer name, commit date) to feed entry title * Wrap the commit message in <pre> * Make file names into an unordered list * Add links (diff, conditional blame, history) to the file list. In addition to the above points, the attached patch emits a Last-Changed: HTTP response header field, and doesn't compute the feed body if the HTTP request type was HEAD. This helps keep the web server load down for well-behaved feed readers that check if the feed needs updating. If browser (feed reader) sent Accept: header, and it prefers 'text/xml' type to 'application/rss+xml' (in the case of RSS feed) or 'application/atom+xml' (in the case of Atom feed), then use 'text/xml' as content type. Both RSS and Atom feeds validate at http://feedvalidator.org and at http://validator.w3.org/feed/ Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Andreas Fuchs <asf@boinkor.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
print $cgi->header(
-type => $content_type,
-charset => 'utf-8',
-last_modified => $latest_date{'rfc2822'});
} else {
print $cgi->header(
-type => $content_type,
-charset => 'utf-8');
}
# Optimization: skip generating the body if client asks only
# for Last-Modified date.
return if ($cgi->request_method() eq 'HEAD');
# header variables
my $title = "$site_name - $project/$action";
my $feed_type = 'log';
if (defined $hash) {
$title .= " - '$hash'";
$feed_type = 'branch log';
if (defined $file_name) {
$title .= " :: $file_name";
$feed_type = 'history';
}
} elsif (defined $file_name) {
$title .= " - $file_name";
$feed_type = 'history';
}
$title .= " $feed_type";
my $descr = git_get_project_description($project);
if (defined $descr) {
$descr = esc_html($descr);
} else {
$descr = "$project " .
($format eq 'rss' ? 'RSS' : 'Atom') .
" feed";
}
my $owner = git_get_project_owner($project);
$owner = esc_html($owner);
#header
my $alt_url;
if (defined $file_name) {
$alt_url = href(-full=>1, action=>"history", hash=>$hash, file_name=>$file_name);
} elsif (defined $hash) {
$alt_url = href(-full=>1, action=>"log", hash=>$hash);
} else {
$alt_url = href(-full=>1, action=>"summary");
}
print qq!<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>\n!;
if ($format eq 'rss') {
print <<XML;
<rss version="2.0" xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/">
<channel>
XML
gitweb: Refactor feed generation, make output prettier, add Atom feed Add support for more modern Atom web feed format. Both RSS and Atom feeds are generated by git_feed subroutine to avoid code duplication; git_rss and git_atom are thin wrappers around git_feed. Add links to Atom feed in HTML header and in page footer (but not in OPML; we should use APP, Atom Publishing Proptocol instead). Allow for feed generation for branches other than current (HEAD) branch, and for generation of feeds for file or directory history. Do not use "pre ${\sub_returning_scalar(...)} post" trick, but join strings instead: "pre " . sub_returning_scalar(...) . " post". Use href(-full=>1, ...) instead of hand-crafting gitweb urls. Make output prettier: * Use title similar to the title of web page * Use project description (if exists) for description/subtitle * Do not add anything (committer name, commit date) to feed entry title * Wrap the commit message in <pre> * Make file names into an unordered list * Add links (diff, conditional blame, history) to the file list. In addition to the above points, the attached patch emits a Last-Changed: HTTP response header field, and doesn't compute the feed body if the HTTP request type was HEAD. This helps keep the web server load down for well-behaved feed readers that check if the feed needs updating. If browser (feed reader) sent Accept: header, and it prefers 'text/xml' type to 'application/rss+xml' (in the case of RSS feed) or 'application/atom+xml' (in the case of Atom feed), then use 'text/xml' as content type. Both RSS and Atom feeds validate at http://feedvalidator.org and at http://validator.w3.org/feed/ Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Andreas Fuchs <asf@boinkor.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
print "<title>$title</title>\n" .
"<link>$alt_url</link>\n" .
"<description>$descr</description>\n" .
"<language>en</language>\n";
} elsif ($format eq 'atom') {
print <<XML;
<feed xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom">
XML
print "<title>$title</title>\n" .
"<subtitle>$descr</subtitle>\n" .
'<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="' .
$alt_url . '" />' . "\n" .
'<link rel="self" type="' . $content_type . '" href="' .
$cgi->self_url() . '" />' . "\n" .
"<id>" . href(-full=>1) . "</id>\n" .
# use project owner for feed author
"<author><name>$owner</name></author>\n";
if (defined $favicon) {
print "<icon>" . esc_url($favicon) . "</icon>\n";
}
if (defined $logo_url) {
# not twice as wide as tall: 72 x 27 pixels
print "<logo>" . esc_url($logo) . "</logo>\n";
gitweb: Refactor feed generation, make output prettier, add Atom feed Add support for more modern Atom web feed format. Both RSS and Atom feeds are generated by git_feed subroutine to avoid code duplication; git_rss and git_atom are thin wrappers around git_feed. Add links to Atom feed in HTML header and in page footer (but not in OPML; we should use APP, Atom Publishing Proptocol instead). Allow for feed generation for branches other than current (HEAD) branch, and for generation of feeds for file or directory history. Do not use "pre ${\sub_returning_scalar(...)} post" trick, but join strings instead: "pre " . sub_returning_scalar(...) . " post". Use href(-full=>1, ...) instead of hand-crafting gitweb urls. Make output prettier: * Use title similar to the title of web page * Use project description (if exists) for description/subtitle * Do not add anything (committer name, commit date) to feed entry title * Wrap the commit message in <pre> * Make file names into an unordered list * Add links (diff, conditional blame, history) to the file list. In addition to the above points, the attached patch emits a Last-Changed: HTTP response header field, and doesn't compute the feed body if the HTTP request type was HEAD. This helps keep the web server load down for well-behaved feed readers that check if the feed needs updating. If browser (feed reader) sent Accept: header, and it prefers 'text/xml' type to 'application/rss+xml' (in the case of RSS feed) or 'application/atom+xml' (in the case of Atom feed), then use 'text/xml' as content type. Both RSS and Atom feeds validate at http://feedvalidator.org and at http://validator.w3.org/feed/ Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Andreas Fuchs <asf@boinkor.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
}
if (! %latest_date) {
# dummy date to keep the feed valid until commits trickle in:
print "<updated>1970-01-01T00:00:00Z</updated>\n";
} else {
print "<updated>$latest_date{'iso-8601'}</updated>\n";
}
}
gitweb: Refactor feed generation, make output prettier, add Atom feed Add support for more modern Atom web feed format. Both RSS and Atom feeds are generated by git_feed subroutine to avoid code duplication; git_rss and git_atom are thin wrappers around git_feed. Add links to Atom feed in HTML header and in page footer (but not in OPML; we should use APP, Atom Publishing Proptocol instead). Allow for feed generation for branches other than current (HEAD) branch, and for generation of feeds for file or directory history. Do not use "pre ${\sub_returning_scalar(...)} post" trick, but join strings instead: "pre " . sub_returning_scalar(...) . " post". Use href(-full=>1, ...) instead of hand-crafting gitweb urls. Make output prettier: * Use title similar to the title of web page * Use project description (if exists) for description/subtitle * Do not add anything (committer name, commit date) to feed entry title * Wrap the commit message in <pre> * Make file names into an unordered list * Add links (diff, conditional blame, history) to the file list. In addition to the above points, the attached patch emits a Last-Changed: HTTP response header field, and doesn't compute the feed body if the HTTP request type was HEAD. This helps keep the web server load down for well-behaved feed readers that check if the feed needs updating. If browser (feed reader) sent Accept: header, and it prefers 'text/xml' type to 'application/rss+xml' (in the case of RSS feed) or 'application/atom+xml' (in the case of Atom feed), then use 'text/xml' as content type. Both RSS and Atom feeds validate at http://feedvalidator.org and at http://validator.w3.org/feed/ Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Andreas Fuchs <asf@boinkor.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
# contents
for (my $i = 0; $i <= $#commitlist; $i++) {
my %co = %{$commitlist[$i]};
my $commit = $co{'id'};
# we read 150, we always show 30 and the ones more recent than 48 hours
if (($i >= 20) && ((time - $co{'author_epoch'}) > 48*60*60)) {
last;
}
my %cd = parse_date($co{'author_epoch'});
gitweb: Refactor feed generation, make output prettier, add Atom feed Add support for more modern Atom web feed format. Both RSS and Atom feeds are generated by git_feed subroutine to avoid code duplication; git_rss and git_atom are thin wrappers around git_feed. Add links to Atom feed in HTML header and in page footer (but not in OPML; we should use APP, Atom Publishing Proptocol instead). Allow for feed generation for branches other than current (HEAD) branch, and for generation of feeds for file or directory history. Do not use "pre ${\sub_returning_scalar(...)} post" trick, but join strings instead: "pre " . sub_returning_scalar(...) . " post". Use href(-full=>1, ...) instead of hand-crafting gitweb urls. Make output prettier: * Use title similar to the title of web page * Use project description (if exists) for description/subtitle * Do not add anything (committer name, commit date) to feed entry title * Wrap the commit message in <pre> * Make file names into an unordered list * Add links (diff, conditional blame, history) to the file list. In addition to the above points, the attached patch emits a Last-Changed: HTTP response header field, and doesn't compute the feed body if the HTTP request type was HEAD. This helps keep the web server load down for well-behaved feed readers that check if the feed needs updating. If browser (feed reader) sent Accept: header, and it prefers 'text/xml' type to 'application/rss+xml' (in the case of RSS feed) or 'application/atom+xml' (in the case of Atom feed), then use 'text/xml' as content type. Both RSS and Atom feeds validate at http://feedvalidator.org and at http://validator.w3.org/feed/ Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Andreas Fuchs <asf@boinkor.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
# get list of changed files
open my $fd, "-|", git_cmd(), "diff-tree", '-r', @diff_opts,
$co{'parent'} || "--root",
$co{'id'}, "--", (defined $file_name ? $file_name : ())
or next;
my @difftree = map { chomp; $_ } <$fd>;
close $fd
or next;
gitweb: Refactor feed generation, make output prettier, add Atom feed Add support for more modern Atom web feed format. Both RSS and Atom feeds are generated by git_feed subroutine to avoid code duplication; git_rss and git_atom are thin wrappers around git_feed. Add links to Atom feed in HTML header and in page footer (but not in OPML; we should use APP, Atom Publishing Proptocol instead). Allow for feed generation for branches other than current (HEAD) branch, and for generation of feeds for file or directory history. Do not use "pre ${\sub_returning_scalar(...)} post" trick, but join strings instead: "pre " . sub_returning_scalar(...) . " post". Use href(-full=>1, ...) instead of hand-crafting gitweb urls. Make output prettier: * Use title similar to the title of web page * Use project description (if exists) for description/subtitle * Do not add anything (committer name, commit date) to feed entry title * Wrap the commit message in <pre> * Make file names into an unordered list * Add links (diff, conditional blame, history) to the file list. In addition to the above points, the attached patch emits a Last-Changed: HTTP response header field, and doesn't compute the feed body if the HTTP request type was HEAD. This helps keep the web server load down for well-behaved feed readers that check if the feed needs updating. If browser (feed reader) sent Accept: header, and it prefers 'text/xml' type to 'application/rss+xml' (in the case of RSS feed) or 'application/atom+xml' (in the case of Atom feed), then use 'text/xml' as content type. Both RSS and Atom feeds validate at http://feedvalidator.org and at http://validator.w3.org/feed/ Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Andreas Fuchs <asf@boinkor.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
# print element (entry, item)
my $co_url = href(-full=>1, action=>"commitdiff", hash=>$commit);
gitweb: Refactor feed generation, make output prettier, add Atom feed Add support for more modern Atom web feed format. Both RSS and Atom feeds are generated by git_feed subroutine to avoid code duplication; git_rss and git_atom are thin wrappers around git_feed. Add links to Atom feed in HTML header and in page footer (but not in OPML; we should use APP, Atom Publishing Proptocol instead). Allow for feed generation for branches other than current (HEAD) branch, and for generation of feeds for file or directory history. Do not use "pre ${\sub_returning_scalar(...)} post" trick, but join strings instead: "pre " . sub_returning_scalar(...) . " post". Use href(-full=>1, ...) instead of hand-crafting gitweb urls. Make output prettier: * Use title similar to the title of web page * Use project description (if exists) for description/subtitle * Do not add anything (committer name, commit date) to feed entry title * Wrap the commit message in <pre> * Make file names into an unordered list * Add links (diff, conditional blame, history) to the file list. In addition to the above points, the attached patch emits a Last-Changed: HTTP response header field, and doesn't compute the feed body if the HTTP request type was HEAD. This helps keep the web server load down for well-behaved feed readers that check if the feed needs updating. If browser (feed reader) sent Accept: header, and it prefers 'text/xml' type to 'application/rss+xml' (in the case of RSS feed) or 'application/atom+xml' (in the case of Atom feed), then use 'text/xml' as content type. Both RSS and Atom feeds validate at http://feedvalidator.org and at http://validator.w3.org/feed/ Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Andreas Fuchs <asf@boinkor.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
if ($format eq 'rss') {
print "<item>\n" .
"<title>" . esc_html($co{'title'}) . "</title>\n" .
"<author>" . esc_html($co{'author'}) . "</author>\n" .
"<pubDate>$cd{'rfc2822'}</pubDate>\n" .
"<guid isPermaLink=\"true\">$co_url</guid>\n" .
"<link>$co_url</link>\n" .
"<description>" . esc_html($co{'title'}) . "</description>\n" .
"<content:encoded>" .
"<![CDATA[\n";
} elsif ($format eq 'atom') {
print "<entry>\n" .
"<title type=\"html\">" . esc_html($co{'title'}) . "</title>\n" .
"<updated>$cd{'iso-8601'}</updated>\n" .
"<author>\n" .
" <name>" . esc_html($co{'author_name'}) . "</name>\n";
if ($co{'author_email'}) {
print " <email>" . esc_html($co{'author_email'}) . "</email>\n";
}
print "</author>\n" .
gitweb: Refactor feed generation, make output prettier, add Atom feed Add support for more modern Atom web feed format. Both RSS and Atom feeds are generated by git_feed subroutine to avoid code duplication; git_rss and git_atom are thin wrappers around git_feed. Add links to Atom feed in HTML header and in page footer (but not in OPML; we should use APP, Atom Publishing Proptocol instead). Allow for feed generation for branches other than current (HEAD) branch, and for generation of feeds for file or directory history. Do not use "pre ${\sub_returning_scalar(...)} post" trick, but join strings instead: "pre " . sub_returning_scalar(...) . " post". Use href(-full=>1, ...) instead of hand-crafting gitweb urls. Make output prettier: * Use title similar to the title of web page * Use project description (if exists) for description/subtitle * Do not add anything (committer name, commit date) to feed entry title * Wrap the commit message in <pre> * Make file names into an unordered list * Add links (diff, conditional blame, history) to the file list. In addition to the above points, the attached patch emits a Last-Changed: HTTP response header field, and doesn't compute the feed body if the HTTP request type was HEAD. This helps keep the web server load down for well-behaved feed readers that check if the feed needs updating. If browser (feed reader) sent Accept: header, and it prefers 'text/xml' type to 'application/rss+xml' (in the case of RSS feed) or 'application/atom+xml' (in the case of Atom feed), then use 'text/xml' as content type. Both RSS and Atom feeds validate at http://feedvalidator.org and at http://validator.w3.org/feed/ Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Andreas Fuchs <asf@boinkor.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
# use committer for contributor
"<contributor>\n" .
" <name>" . esc_html($co{'committer_name'}) . "</name>\n";
if ($co{'committer_email'}) {
print " <email>" . esc_html($co{'committer_email'}) . "</email>\n";
}
print "</contributor>\n" .
gitweb: Refactor feed generation, make output prettier, add Atom feed Add support for more modern Atom web feed format. Both RSS and Atom feeds are generated by git_feed subroutine to avoid code duplication; git_rss and git_atom are thin wrappers around git_feed. Add links to Atom feed in HTML header and in page footer (but not in OPML; we should use APP, Atom Publishing Proptocol instead). Allow for feed generation for branches other than current (HEAD) branch, and for generation of feeds for file or directory history. Do not use "pre ${\sub_returning_scalar(...)} post" trick, but join strings instead: "pre " . sub_returning_scalar(...) . " post". Use href(-full=>1, ...) instead of hand-crafting gitweb urls. Make output prettier: * Use title similar to the title of web page * Use project description (if exists) for description/subtitle * Do not add anything (committer name, commit date) to feed entry title * Wrap the commit message in <pre> * Make file names into an unordered list * Add links (diff, conditional blame, history) to the file list. In addition to the above points, the attached patch emits a Last-Changed: HTTP response header field, and doesn't compute the feed body if the HTTP request type was HEAD. This helps keep the web server load down for well-behaved feed readers that check if the feed needs updating. If browser (feed reader) sent Accept: header, and it prefers 'text/xml' type to 'application/rss+xml' (in the case of RSS feed) or 'application/atom+xml' (in the case of Atom feed), then use 'text/xml' as content type. Both RSS and Atom feeds validate at http://feedvalidator.org and at http://validator.w3.org/feed/ Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Andreas Fuchs <asf@boinkor.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
"<published>$cd{'iso-8601'}</published>\n" .
"<link rel=\"alternate\" type=\"text/html\" href=\"$co_url\" />\n" .
"<id>$co_url</id>\n" .
"<content type=\"xhtml\" xml:base=\"" . esc_url($my_url) . "\">\n" .
"<div xmlns=\"http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml\">\n";
}
my $comment = $co{'comment'};
gitweb: Refactor feed generation, make output prettier, add Atom feed Add support for more modern Atom web feed format. Both RSS and Atom feeds are generated by git_feed subroutine to avoid code duplication; git_rss and git_atom are thin wrappers around git_feed. Add links to Atom feed in HTML header and in page footer (but not in OPML; we should use APP, Atom Publishing Proptocol instead). Allow for feed generation for branches other than current (HEAD) branch, and for generation of feeds for file or directory history. Do not use "pre ${\sub_returning_scalar(...)} post" trick, but join strings instead: "pre " . sub_returning_scalar(...) . " post". Use href(-full=>1, ...) instead of hand-crafting gitweb urls. Make output prettier: * Use title similar to the title of web page * Use project description (if exists) for description/subtitle * Do not add anything (committer name, commit date) to feed entry title * Wrap the commit message in <pre> * Make file names into an unordered list * Add links (diff, conditional blame, history) to the file list. In addition to the above points, the attached patch emits a Last-Changed: HTTP response header field, and doesn't compute the feed body if the HTTP request type was HEAD. This helps keep the web server load down for well-behaved feed readers that check if the feed needs updating. If browser (feed reader) sent Accept: header, and it prefers 'text/xml' type to 'application/rss+xml' (in the case of RSS feed) or 'application/atom+xml' (in the case of Atom feed), then use 'text/xml' as content type. Both RSS and Atom feeds validate at http://feedvalidator.org and at http://validator.w3.org/feed/ Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Andreas Fuchs <asf@boinkor.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
print "<pre>\n";
foreach my $line (@$comment) {
gitweb: Refactor feed generation, make output prettier, add Atom feed Add support for more modern Atom web feed format. Both RSS and Atom feeds are generated by git_feed subroutine to avoid code duplication; git_rss and git_atom are thin wrappers around git_feed. Add links to Atom feed in HTML header and in page footer (but not in OPML; we should use APP, Atom Publishing Proptocol instead). Allow for feed generation for branches other than current (HEAD) branch, and for generation of feeds for file or directory history. Do not use "pre ${\sub_returning_scalar(...)} post" trick, but join strings instead: "pre " . sub_returning_scalar(...) . " post". Use href(-full=>1, ...) instead of hand-crafting gitweb urls. Make output prettier: * Use title similar to the title of web page * Use project description (if exists) for description/subtitle * Do not add anything (committer name, commit date) to feed entry title * Wrap the commit message in <pre> * Make file names into an unordered list * Add links (diff, conditional blame, history) to the file list. In addition to the above points, the attached patch emits a Last-Changed: HTTP response header field, and doesn't compute the feed body if the HTTP request type was HEAD. This helps keep the web server load down for well-behaved feed readers that check if the feed needs updating. If browser (feed reader) sent Accept: header, and it prefers 'text/xml' type to 'application/rss+xml' (in the case of RSS feed) or 'application/atom+xml' (in the case of Atom feed), then use 'text/xml' as content type. Both RSS and Atom feeds validate at http://feedvalidator.org and at http://validator.w3.org/feed/ Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Andreas Fuchs <asf@boinkor.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
$line = esc_html($line);
print "$line\n";
}
gitweb: Refactor feed generation, make output prettier, add Atom feed Add support for more modern Atom web feed format. Both RSS and Atom feeds are generated by git_feed subroutine to avoid code duplication; git_rss and git_atom are thin wrappers around git_feed. Add links to Atom feed in HTML header and in page footer (but not in OPML; we should use APP, Atom Publishing Proptocol instead). Allow for feed generation for branches other than current (HEAD) branch, and for generation of feeds for file or directory history. Do not use "pre ${\sub_returning_scalar(...)} post" trick, but join strings instead: "pre " . sub_returning_scalar(...) . " post". Use href(-full=>1, ...) instead of hand-crafting gitweb urls. Make output prettier: * Use title similar to the title of web page * Use project description (if exists) for description/subtitle * Do not add anything (committer name, commit date) to feed entry title * Wrap the commit message in <pre> * Make file names into an unordered list * Add links (diff, conditional blame, history) to the file list. In addition to the above points, the attached patch emits a Last-Changed: HTTP response header field, and doesn't compute the feed body if the HTTP request type was HEAD. This helps keep the web server load down for well-behaved feed readers that check if the feed needs updating. If browser (feed reader) sent Accept: header, and it prefers 'text/xml' type to 'application/rss+xml' (in the case of RSS feed) or 'application/atom+xml' (in the case of Atom feed), then use 'text/xml' as content type. Both RSS and Atom feeds validate at http://feedvalidator.org and at http://validator.w3.org/feed/ Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Andreas Fuchs <asf@boinkor.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
print "</pre><ul>\n";
foreach my $difftree_line (@difftree) {
my %difftree = parse_difftree_raw_line($difftree_line);
next if !$difftree{'from_id'};
my $file = $difftree{'file'} || $difftree{'to_file'};
print "<li>" .
"[" .
$cgi->a({-href => href(-full=>1, action=>"blobdiff",
hash=>$difftree{'to_id'}, hash_parent=>$difftree{'from_id'},
hash_base=>$co{'id'}, hash_parent_base=>$co{'parent'},
file_name=>$file, file_parent=>$difftree{'from_file'}),
-title => "diff"}, 'D');
if ($have_blame) {
print $cgi->a({-href => href(-full=>1, action=>"blame",
file_name=>$file, hash_base=>$commit),
-title => "blame"}, 'B');
}
gitweb: Refactor feed generation, make output prettier, add Atom feed Add support for more modern Atom web feed format. Both RSS and Atom feeds are generated by git_feed subroutine to avoid code duplication; git_rss and git_atom are thin wrappers around git_feed. Add links to Atom feed in HTML header and in page footer (but not in OPML; we should use APP, Atom Publishing Proptocol instead). Allow for feed generation for branches other than current (HEAD) branch, and for generation of feeds for file or directory history. Do not use "pre ${\sub_returning_scalar(...)} post" trick, but join strings instead: "pre " . sub_returning_scalar(...) . " post". Use href(-full=>1, ...) instead of hand-crafting gitweb urls. Make output prettier: * Use title similar to the title of web page * Use project description (if exists) for description/subtitle * Do not add anything (committer name, commit date) to feed entry title * Wrap the commit message in <pre> * Make file names into an unordered list * Add links (diff, conditional blame, history) to the file list. In addition to the above points, the attached patch emits a Last-Changed: HTTP response header field, and doesn't compute the feed body if the HTTP request type was HEAD. This helps keep the web server load down for well-behaved feed readers that check if the feed needs updating. If browser (feed reader) sent Accept: header, and it prefers 'text/xml' type to 'application/rss+xml' (in the case of RSS feed) or 'application/atom+xml' (in the case of Atom feed), then use 'text/xml' as content type. Both RSS and Atom feeds validate at http://feedvalidator.org and at http://validator.w3.org/feed/ Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Andreas Fuchs <asf@boinkor.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
# if this is not a feed of a file history
if (!defined $file_name || $file_name ne $file) {
print $cgi->a({-href => href(-full=>1, action=>"history",
file_name=>$file, hash=>$commit),
-title => "history"}, 'H');
}
$file = esc_path($file);
print "] ".
"$file</li>\n";
}
if ($format eq 'rss') {
print "</ul>]]>\n" .
"</content:encoded>\n" .
"</item>\n";
} elsif ($format eq 'atom') {
print "</ul>\n</div>\n" .
"</content>\n" .
"</entry>\n";
}
}
gitweb: Refactor feed generation, make output prettier, add Atom feed Add support for more modern Atom web feed format. Both RSS and Atom feeds are generated by git_feed subroutine to avoid code duplication; git_rss and git_atom are thin wrappers around git_feed. Add links to Atom feed in HTML header and in page footer (but not in OPML; we should use APP, Atom Publishing Proptocol instead). Allow for feed generation for branches other than current (HEAD) branch, and for generation of feeds for file or directory history. Do not use "pre ${\sub_returning_scalar(...)} post" trick, but join strings instead: "pre " . sub_returning_scalar(...) . " post". Use href(-full=>1, ...) instead of hand-crafting gitweb urls. Make output prettier: * Use title similar to the title of web page * Use project description (if exists) for description/subtitle * Do not add anything (committer name, commit date) to feed entry title * Wrap the commit message in <pre> * Make file names into an unordered list * Add links (diff, conditional blame, history) to the file list. In addition to the above points, the attached patch emits a Last-Changed: HTTP response header field, and doesn't compute the feed body if the HTTP request type was HEAD. This helps keep the web server load down for well-behaved feed readers that check if the feed needs updating. If browser (feed reader) sent Accept: header, and it prefers 'text/xml' type to 'application/rss+xml' (in the case of RSS feed) or 'application/atom+xml' (in the case of Atom feed), then use 'text/xml' as content type. Both RSS and Atom feeds validate at http://feedvalidator.org and at http://validator.w3.org/feed/ Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Andreas Fuchs <asf@boinkor.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
18 years ago
# end of feed
if ($format eq 'rss') {
print "</channel>\n</rss>\n";
} elsif ($format eq 'atom') {
print "</feed>\n";
}
}
sub git_rss {
git_feed('rss');
}
sub git_atom {
git_feed('atom');
}
sub git_opml {
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
my @list = git_get_projects_list();
print $cgi->header(-type => 'text/xml', -charset => 'utf-8');
print <<XML;
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<opml version="1.0">
<head>
<title>$site_name OPML Export</title>
</head>
<body>
<outline text="git RSS feeds">
XML
foreach my $pr (@list) {
my %proj = %$pr;
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
my $head = git_get_head_hash($proj{'path'});
if (!defined $head) {
next;
}
$git_dir = "$projectroot/$proj{'path'}";
gitweb: Great subroutines renaming Rename some of subroutines to better reflect what they do. Some renames were not performed because subroutine name reflects hash key. Subroutines name guideline: * git_ prefix for subroutines related to git commands, git repository, or to gitweb actions * git_get_ prefix for inner subroutines calling git command or reading some file in the repository and returning some output * parse_ prefix for subroutines parsing some text (or reading and parsing some text) into hash or list * format_ prefix for subroutines formatting, post-processing or generating some HTML/text fragment * _get_ infix for subroutines which return result * _print_ infix for subroutines which print fragment of output * _body suffix for subroutines which outputs main part (body) of related action (usually table) * _nav suffix for subroutines related to navigation bars * _div suffix for subroutines returning or printing div element * subroutine names should not be based on how the result is obtained, as this might change easily Renames performed: - git_get_referencing => format_ref_marker - git_get_paging_nav => format_paging_nav - git_read_head => git_get_head_hash - git_read_hash => git_get_hash_by_ref - git_read_description => git_get_project_description - git_read_projects => git_get_projects_list - read_info_ref => git_get_references - git_read_refs => git_get_refs_list - date_str => parse_date - git_read_tag => parse_tag - git_read_commit => parse_commit - git_blob_plain_mimetype => blob_mimetype - git_page_nav => git_print_page_nav - git_header_div => git_print_header_div Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
my %co = parse_commit($head);
if (!%co) {
next;
}
my $path = esc_html(chop_str($proj{'path'}, 25, 5));
my $rss = "$my_url?p=$proj{'path'};a=rss";
my $html = "$my_url?p=$proj{'path'};a=summary";
print "<outline type=\"rss\" text=\"$path\" title=\"$path\" xmlUrl=\"$rss\" htmlUrl=\"$html\"/>\n";
}
print <<XML;
</outline>
</body>
</opml>
XML
}