Using "git name-rev --stdin" as an example, improve the framework to
prepare tests to pretend to be in the future where the breaking
changes have already happened.
* jc/name-rev-stdin:
name-rev: remove "--stdin" support
t6120: further modernize
t6120: avoid hiding "git" exit status
t: introduce WITH_BREAKING_CHANGES prerequisite
t: extend test_lazy_prereq
t: document test_lazy_prereq
Earlier c5bc9a7f (Makefile: wire up build option for deprecated
features, 2025-01-22) made an unfortunate decision to introduce the
WITHOUT_BREAKING_CHANGES prerequisite to perform tests that ensure
the historical behaviour that may be different from what we will
have in the future. It would inevitably invite double-negation when
we need to add tests to ensure the behaviour we want to have in the
future.
Introduce WITH_BREAKING_CHANGES prerequisite and replace the
existing uses of WITHOUT_BREAKING_CHANGES prerequisite. To catch
any future topics that add more uses of WITHOUT_BREAKING_CHANGES,
mark it as a removed prerequisite.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Commit 6c301adb0a (fetch: do not pass ref-prefixes for fetch by exact
SHA1, 2018-05-31) added a test that fetching an exact oid with the v2
protocol works. Originally it failed without the code change from that
commit, because fetch failed with "no matching remote head".
That changed in 0177565148 (transport: do not list refs if possible,
2018-09-27), which made fetch more forgiving of this case.
But that now meant the test passes even without its fix! So let's also
have it check the packet listing to make sure we did not ask for the
bogus prefix (ultimately this is less important than whether the command
fails, since it's just an optimization, but we should make sure not to
regress it).
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When this test was added in 6c301adb0a (fetch: do not pass ref-prefixes
for fetch by exact SHA1, 2018-05-31), there was still some uncertainty
about the v2 protocol's looser behavior with serving objects that are
not directly pointed at by a ref.
At this point that behavior is well established, and I do not think we
would ever change v2 to match the v0 behavior (and if we did,
remembering to update this test is the least of our concerns).
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
These old tests refer to object ids as "sha1". These days we prefer
the more algorithm-agnostic "oid".
There are a few more tests that mention sha1 in the title and also use
it in variables throughout the test. I've left them for now, as changing
them is more involved (and they're linked to the allowTipSHA1InWant
config, which as a v0-only thing actually is always sha1).
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Following the procedure we established to introduce breaking
changes for Git 3.0, allow an early opt-in for removing support of
$GIT_DIR/branches/ and $GIT_DIR/remotes/ directories to configure
remotes.
* ps/3.0-remote-deprecation:
remote: announce removal of "branches/" and "remotes/"
builtin/pack-redundant: remove subcommand with breaking changes
ci: repurpose "linux-gcc" job for deprecations
ci: merge linux-gcc-default into linux-gcc
Makefile: wire up build option for deprecated features
Back when Git was in its infancy, remotes were configured via separate
files in "branches/" (back in 2005). This mechanism was replaced later
that year with the "remotes/" directory. Both mechanisms have eventually
been replaced by config-based remotes, and it is very unlikely that
anybody still uses these directories to configure their remotes.
Both of these directories have been marked as deprecated, one in 2005
and the other one in 2011. Follow through with the deprecation and
finally announce the removal of these features in Git 3.0.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
[jc: with a small tweak to the help message]
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When "git fetch $remote" notices that refs/remotes/$remote/HEAD is
missing and discovers what branch the other side points with its
HEAD, refs/remotes/$remote/HEAD is updated to point to it.
* bf/set-head-symref:
fetch set_head: handle mirrored bare repositories
fetch: set remote/HEAD if it does not exist
refs: add create_only option to refs_update_symref_extended
refs: add TRANSACTION_CREATE_EXISTS error
remote set-head: better output for --auto
remote set-head: refactor for readability
refs: atomically record overwritten ref in update_symref
refs: standardize output of refs_read_symbolic_ref
t/t5505-remote: test failure of set-head
t/t5505-remote: set default branch to main
When cloning a repository remote/HEAD is created, but when the user
creates a repository with git init, and later adds a remote, remote/HEAD
is only created if the user explicitly runs a variant of "remote
set-head". Attempt to set remote/HEAD during fetch, if the user does not
have it already set. Silently ignore any errors.
Signed-off-by: Bence Ferdinandy <bence@ferdinandy.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Now that the default value for TEST_PASSES_SANITIZE_LEAK is `true` there
is no longer a need to have that variable declared in all of our tests.
Drop it.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
We spawn a git-rev-list(1) command to perform reachability checks in
"upload-pack.c". We do not release memory associated with the process
in error cases though, thus leaking memory.
Fix these by calling `child_process_clear()`.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When "git push" is configured to use the push negotiation, a push of
deletion of a branch (without pushing anything else) may end up not
having anything to negotiate for the common ancestor discovery.
In such a case, we end up making an internal invocation of "git
fetch --negotiate-only" without any "--negotiate-tip" parameters
that stops the negotiate-only fetch from being run, which by itself
is not a bad thing (one fewer round-trip), but the end-user sees a
"fatal: --negotiate-only needs one or more --negotiation-tip=*"
message that the user cannot act upon.
Teach "git push" to notice the situation and omit performing the
negotiate-only fetch to begin with. One fewer process spawned, one
fewer "alarming" message given the user.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
They are equivalents and the former still exists, so as long as the
only change this commit makes are to rewrite test_i18ngrep to
test_grep, there won't be any new bug, even if there still are
callers of test_i18ngrep remaining in the tree, or when merged to
other topics that add new uses of test_i18ngrep.
This patch was produced more or less with
git grep -l -e 'test_i18ngrep ' 't/t[0-9][0-9][0-9][0-9]-*.sh' |
xargs perl -p -i -e 's/test_i18ngrep /test_grep /'
and a good way to sanity check the result yourself is to run the
above in a checkout of c4603c1c (test framework: further deprecate
test_i18ngrep, 2023-10-31) and compare the resulting working tree
contents with the result of applying this patch to the same commit.
You'll see that test_i18ngrep in a few t/lib-*.sh files corrected,
in addition to the manual reproduction.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Now we have introduced OPT_IPVERSION(), tweak its implementation so
that "git clone", "git fetch", and "git push" reject the negated
form of "Use only IP version N" options.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
We discourage the creation/update of single-level refs
because some upper-layer applications only work in specified
reference namespaces, such as "refs/heads/*" or "refs/tags/*",
these single-level refnames may not be recognized. However,
we still hope users can delete them which have been created
by mistake.
Therefore, when updating branches on the server with
"git receive-pack", by checking whether it is a branch deletion
operation, it will determine whether to allow the update of
a single-level refs. This avoids creating/updating such
single-level refs, but allows them to be deleted.
On the client side, "git push" also does not properly fill in
the old-oid of single-level refs, which causes the server-side
"git receive-pack" to think that the ref's old-oid has changed
when deleting single-level refs, this causes the push to be
rejected. So the solution is to fix the client to be able to
delete single-level refs by properly filling old-oid.
Signed-off-by: ZheNing Hu <adlternative@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The test case "push with config push.useBitmap" of t5516 was introduced
in commit 82f67ee13f (send-pack.c: add config push.useBitmaps,
2022-06-17). It won't work in verbose mode, e.g.:
$ sh t5516-fetch-push.sh --run='1,115' -v
This is because "git-push" will run in a tty in this case, and the
subcommand "git pack-objects" will contain an argument "--progress"
instead of "-q". Adding a specific option "--quiet" to "git push" will
get a stable result for t5516.
Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <zhiyou.jx@alibaba-inc.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Commit 6dcbdc0d66 (remote: create fetch.credentialsInUrl config,
2022-06-06) added tests for our handling of passwords in URLs. Since the
obvious URL to be affected is git-over-http, the tests use http. However
they don't set up a test server; they just try to access
https://localhost, assuming it will fail (because the nothing is
listening there).
This causes some possible problems:
- There might be a web server running on localhost, and we do not
actually want to connect to that.
- The DNS resolver, or the local firewall, might take a substantial
amount of time (or forever, whichever comes first) to fail to
connect, slowing down the tests cases unnecessarily.
- Since there's no server, our tests for "allow" and "warn" still
expect the clone/fetch/push operations to fail, even though in the
real world we'd expect these to succeed. We scrape stderr to see
what happened, but it's not as robust as a more realistic test.
Let's instead move these to t5551, which is all about testing http and
where we have a real server. That eliminates any issues with contacting
a strange URL, and lets the "allow" and "warn" tests confirm that the
operation actually succeeds.
It's not quite a verbatim move for a few reasons:
- we can drop the LIBCURL dependency; it's already part of
lib-httpd.sh
- we'll use HTTPD_URL_USER_PASS, etc, instead of our fake URL. To
avoid repetition, we'll add a few extra variables.
- the "https://username:@localhost" test uses a funny URL that
lib-httpd.sh doesn't provide. We'll similarly construct it in a
variable. Note that we're hard-coding the lib-httpd username here,
but t5551 already does that everywhere.
- for the "domain:port" test, the URL provided by lib-httpd is fine,
since our test server will always be on an exotic port. But we'll
confirm in the test that this is so.
- since our message-matching is done via grep, I simplified it to use
a regex, rather than trying to massage lib-httpd's variables.
Arguably this makes it more readable, too, while retaining the bits
we care about: the fatal/warning distinction, the "uses plaintext"
message, and the fact that the password was redacted.
- we'll use the /auth/ path for the repo, which shows that we are
indeed making use of the auth information when needed.
- we'll also use /smart/; most of these tests could be done via /dumb/
in t5550, but setting up pushes there requires extra effort and
dependencies. The smart protocol is what most everyone is using
these days anyway.
This patch is my own, but I stole the analysis and a few bits of the
commit message from a patch by Johannes Schindelin.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Explicitly cloning over the "file://" protocol in t5516 in preparation
for merging a security release which will change the default value of
this configuration to be "user".
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Currently, negotiation for V0/V1/V2 fetch have trace2 regions covering
the entire negotiation process. However, we'd like additional data, such
as timing for each round of negotiation or the number of "haves" in each
round. Additionally, "independent negotiation" (AKA push negotiation)
has no tracing at all. Having this data would allow us to compare the
performance of the various negotation implementations, and to debug
unexpectedly slow fetch & push sessions.
Add per-round trace2 regions for all negotiation implementations (V0+V1,
V2, and independent negotiation), as well as an overall region for
independent negotiation. Add trace2 data logging for the number of haves
and "in vain" objects for each round, and for the total number of rounds
once negotiation completes. Finally, add a few checks into various
tests to verify that the number of rounds is logged as expected.
Signed-off-by: Josh Steadmon <steadmon@google.com>
Acked-by: Jeff Hostetler <jeffhost@microsoft.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Tweak tests so that they still work when the "git init" template
did not create .git/info directory.
* ab/test-without-templates:
tests: don't assume a .git/info for .git/info/sparse-checkout
tests: don't assume a .git/info for .git/info/exclude
tests: don't assume a .git/info for .git/info/refs
tests: don't assume a .git/info for .git/info/attributes
tests: don't assume a .git/info for .git/info/grafts
tests: don't depend on template-created .git/branches
t0008: don't rely on default ".git/info/exclude"
"git push" sometimes perform poorly when reachability bitmaps are
used, even in a repository where other operations are helped by
bitmaps. The push.useBitmaps configuration variable is introduced
to allow disabling use of reachability bitmaps only for "git push".
* zk/push-use-bitmaps:
send-pack.c: add config push.useBitmaps
Reachability bitmaps are designed to speed up the "counting objects"
phase of generating a pack during a clone or fetch. They are not
optimized for Git clients sending a small topic branch via "git push".
In some cases (see [1]), using reachability bitmaps during "git push"
can cause significant performance regressions.
Add a new "push.useBitmaps" configuration variable to allow users to
tell "git push" not to use bitmaps. We already have "pack.bitmaps"
that controls the use of bitmaps, but a separate configuration variable
allows the reachability bitmaps to still be used in other areas,
such as "git upload-pack", while disabling it only for "git push".
[1]: https://lore.kernel.org/git/87zhoz8b9o.fsf@evledraar.gmail.com/
Signed-off-by: Kyle Zhao <kylezhao@tencent.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Rename fetch.credentialsInUrl to transfer.credentialsInUrl as the
single configuration variable should work both in pushing and
fetching.
* ab/credentials-in-url-more:
transfer doc: move fetch.credentialsInUrl to "transfer" config namespace
fetch doc: note "pushurl" caveat about "credentialsInUrl", elaborate
Add and use a LIBCURL prerequisite for tests added in
6dcbdc0d66 (remote: create fetch.credentialsInUrl config,
2022-06-06).
These tests would get as far as emitting a couple of the warnings we
were testing for, but would then die as we had no "git-remote-https"
program compiled.
It would be more consistent with other prerequisites (e.g. PERL for
NO_PERL) to name this "CURL", but since e9184b0789 (t5561: skip tests
if curl is not available, 2018-04-03) we've had that prerequisite
defined for checking of we have the curl(1) program.
The existing "CURL" prerequisite is only used in one place, and we
should probably name it "CURL_PROGRAM", then rename "LIBCURL" to
"CURL" as a follow-up, but for now (pre-v2.37.0) let's aim for the
most minimal fix possible.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Rename the "fetch.credentialsInUrl" configuration variable introduced
in 6dcbdc0d66 (remote: create fetch.credentialsInUrl config,
2022-06-06) to "transfer".
There are existing exceptions, but generally speaking the
"<namespace>.<var>" configuration should only apply to command
described in the "namespace" (and its sub-commands, so e.g. "clone.*"
or "fetch.*" might also configure "git-remote-https").
But in the case of "fetch.credentialsInUrl" we've got a configuration
variable that configures the behavior of all of "clone", "push" and
"fetch", someone adjusting "fetch.*" configuration won't expect to
have the behavior of "git push" altered, especially as we have the
pre-existing "{transfer,fetch,receive}.fsckObjects", which configures
different parts of the transfer dialog.
So let's move this configuration variable to the "transfer" namespace
before it's exposed in a release. We could add all of
"{transfer,fetch,pull}.credentialsInUrl" at some other time, but once
we have "fetch" configure "pull" such an arrangement would would be a
confusing mess, as we'd at least need to have "fetch" configure
"push" (but not the other way around), or change existing behavior.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Derrick Stolee <derrickstolee@github.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The "fetch.credentialsInUrl" configuration variable controls what
happens when a URL with embedded login credential is used.
* ds/credentials-in-url:
remote: create fetch.credentialsInUrl config
A misconfigured 'branch..remote' led to a bug in configuration
parsing.
* gc/zero-length-branch-config-fix:
remote.c: reject 0-length branch names
remote.c: don't BUG() on 0-length branch names
As noted in c8a58ac5a5 (Revert "Don't create the $GIT_DIR/branches
directory on init", 2009-10-31) there was an attempt long ago in
0cc5691a8b (Don't create the $GIT_DIR/branches directory on init,
2009-10-30) to get rid of the legacy "branches" directory.
We should probably get rid of its creation by removing the
"templates/branches--" file. But whatever our default behavior, our
tests should be tightened up to explicitly create the .git/branches
directory if they rely on our default templates, to make the
dependency on those templates clear.
So let's amend the two tests that would fail if .git/branches wasn't
created. To do this introduce a new "TEST_CREATE_REPO_NO_TEMPLATE"
variable, which we'll set before sourcing test-lib.sh, and change the
"git clone" and "git init" commands in the tests themselves to
explicitly pass "--template=".
This way they won't get a .git/branches in either their top-level
.git, or in the ones they create. We can then amend the tests that
rely on the ".git/branches" directory existing to create it
explicitly, and to remove it after its creation.
This new "TEST_CREATE_REPO_NO_TEMPLATE" variable is a less
heavy-handed version of the "NO_SET_GIT_TEMPLATE_DIR" variable. See
a94d305bf8 (t/t0001-init.sh: add test for 'init with init.templatedir
set', 2010-02-26) for its implementation.
Unlike "TEST_CREATE_REPO_NO_TEMPLATE", this new
"TEST_CREATE_REPO_NO_TEMPLATE" variable is narrowly scoped to what the
"git init" in test-lib.sh does, as opposed to the global effect of
"NO_SET_GIT_TEMPLATE_DIR" and the setting of "GIT_TEMPLATE_DIR" in
wrap-for-bin.sh.
I experimented with adding a new "GIT_WRAP_FOR_BIN_VIA_TEST_LIB"
variable set in test-lib.sh, which would cause wrap-for-bin.sh to not
set GIT_TEMPLATE_DIR, GITPERLLIB etc, as we set those in
test-lib.sh. I think that's a viable approach, but it would interact
e.g. with the appending feature of GITPERLLIB added in
8bade1e12e (wrap-for-bin: make bin-wrappers chainable, 2013-07-04).
Doing so would allow us to convert the tests in t0001-init.sh that now
use "NO_SET_GIT_TEMPLATE_DIR" to simply unset "GIT_TEMPLATE_DIR" in a
sub-shell before invoking "git init" or "git clone". I think that
approach is worth pursuing, but let's table it for now. Some future
wrap-for-bin.sh refactoring can try to address it.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Users sometimes provide a "username:password" combination in their
plaintext URLs. Since Git stores these URLs in plaintext in the
.git/config file, this is a very insecure way of storing these
credentials. Credential managers are a more secure way of storing this
information.
System administrators might want to prevent this kind of use by users on
their machines.
Create a new "fetch.credentialsInUrl" config option and teach Git to
warn or die when seeing a URL with this kind of information. The warning
anonymizes the sensitive information of the URL to be clear about the
issue.
This change currently defaults the behavior to "allow" which does
nothing with these URLs. We can consider changing this behavior to
"warn" by default if we wish. At that time, we may want to add some
advice about setting fetch.credentialsInUrl=ignore for users who still
want to follow this pattern (and not receive the warning).
An earlier version of this change injected the logic into
url_normalize() in urlmatch.c. While most code paths that parse URLs
eventually normalize the URL, that normalization does not happen early
enough in the stack to avoid attempting connections to the URL first. By
inserting a check into the remote validation, we identify the issue
before making a connection. In the old code path, this was revealed by
testing the new t5601-clone.sh test under --stress, resulting in an
instance where the return code was 13 (SIGPIPE) instead of 128 from the
die().
However, we can reuse the parsing information from url_normalize() in
order to benefit from its well-worn parsing logic. We can use the struct
url_info that is created in that method to replace the password with
"<redacted>" in our error messages. This comes with a slight downside
that the normalized URL might look slightly different from the input URL
(for instance, the normalized version adds a closing slash). This should
not hinder users figuring out what the problem is and being able to fix
the issue.
As an attempt to ensure the parsing logic did not catch any
unintentional cases, I modified this change locally to to use the "die"
option by default. Running the test suite succeeds except for the
explicit username:password URLs used in t5550-http-fetch-dumb.sh and
t5541-http-push-smart.sh. This means that all other tested URLs did not
trigger this logic.
The tests show that the proper error messages appear (or do not
appear), but also count the number of error messages. When only warning,
each process validates the remote URL and outputs a warning. This
happens twice for clone, three times for fetch, and once for push.
Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <derrickstolee@github.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Branch names can't be empty, so config keys with an empty branch name,
e.g. "branch..remote", are silently ignored.
Since these config keys will never be useful, make it a fatal error when
remote.c finds a key that starts with "branch." and has an empty
subsection.
Signed-off-by: Glen Choo <chooglen@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
4a2dcb1a08 (remote: die if branch is not found in repository,
2021-11-17) introduced a regression where multiple config entries with
an empty branch name, e.g.
[branch ""]
remote = foo
merge = bar
could cause Git to fail when it tries to look up branch tracking
information.
We parse the config key to get (branch name, branch name length), but
when the branch name subsection is empty, we get a bogus branch name,
e.g. "branch..remote" gives (".remote", 0). We continue to use the bogus
branch name as if it were valid, and prior to 4a2dcb1a08, this wasn't an
issue because length = 0 caused the branch name to effectively be ""
everywhere.
However, that commit handles length = 0 inconsistently when we create
the branch:
- When find_branch() is called to check if the branch exists in the
branch hash map, it interprets a length of 0 to mean that it should
call strlen on the char pointer.
- But the code path that inserts into the branch hash map interprets a
length of 0 to mean that the string is 0-length.
This results in the bug described above:
- "branch..remote" looks for ".remote" in the branch hash map. Since we
do not find it, we insert the "" entry into the hash map.
- "branch..merge" looks for ".merge" in the branch hash map. Since we
do not find it, we again try to insert the "" entry into the hash map.
However, the entries in the branch hash map are supposed to be
appended to, not overwritten.
- Since overwriting an entry is a BUG(), Git fails instead of silently
ignoring the empty branch name.
Fix the bug by removing the convenience strlen functionality, so that
0 means that the string is 0-length. We still insert a bogus branch name
into the hash map, but this will be fixed in a later commit.
Reported-by: "Ing. Martin Prantl Ph.D." <perry@ntis.zcu.cz>
Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Glen Choo <chooglen@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Change the "t5516-fetch-push.sh" test code to make use of the new
"test_hook" helper, and to use "test_when_finished" to have tests
clean up their own state, instead of relying on subsequent tests to
clean the trash directory.
Before this each test would have been responsible for cleaning up
after a preceding test (which may or may not have run, e.g. if --run
or "GIT_SKIP_TESTS" was used), now each test will instead clean up
after itself.
In order to use both "test_hook" and "test_when_finished" we need to
move them out of sub-shells, which requires some refactoring.
While we're at it split up the "push with negotiation" test, now the
middle of the test doesn't need to "rm event", and since it delimited
two halves that were testing two different things the end-state is
easier to read and reason about.
While changing these lines make the minor change from "-fr" to "-rf"
as the "rm" argument, some of them used it already, it's more common
in the test suite, and it leaves the end-state of the file with more
consistency.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Stop moving the .git/hooks directory out of the way, or creating it
during test setup. Instead assume that it will contain
harmless *.sample files.
That we can assume that is discussed in point #4 of
f0d4d398e2 (test-lib: split up and deprecate test_create_repo(),
2021-05-10), those parts of this could and should have been done in
that change.
Removing the "mkdir -p" here will then validate that our templates are
being used, since we'd subsequently fail to create a hook in that
directory if it didn't exist. Subsequent commits will have those hooks
created by a "test_hook" wrapper, which will then being doing that
same validation.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
"receive-pack" checks if it will do any ref updates (various
conditions could reject a push) before received objects are taken
out of the temporary directory used for quarantine purposes, so
that a push that is known-to-fail will not leave crufts that a
future "gc" needs to clean up.
* cb/clear-quarantine-early-on-all-ref-update-errors:
receive-pack: purge temporary data if no command is ready to run
"git fetch --negotiate-only" is an internal command used by "git
push" to figure out which part of our history is missing from the
other side. It should never recurse into submodules even when
fetch.recursesubmodules configuration variable is set, nor it
should trigger "gc". The code has been tightened up to ensure it
only does common ancestry discovery and nothing else.
* gc/fetch-negotiate-only-early-return:
fetch: help translators by reusing the same message template
fetch --negotiate-only: do not update submodules
fetch: skip tasks related to fetching objects
fetch: use goto cleanup in cmd_fetch()
When pushing a hidden ref, e.g.:
$ git push origin HEAD:refs/hidden/foo
"receive-pack" will reject our request with an error message like this:
! [remote rejected] HEAD -> refs/hidden/foo (deny updating a hidden ref)
The remote side ("git-receive-pack") will not create the hidden ref as
expected, but the pack file sent by "git-send-pack" is left inside the
remote repository. I.e. the quarantine directory is not purged as it
should be.
Add a checkpoint before calling "tmp_objdir_migrate()" and after calling
the "pre-receive" hook to purge that temporary data in the quarantine
area when there is no command ready to run.
The reason we do not add the checkpoint before the "pre-receive" hook,
but after it, is that the "pre-receive" hook is called with a switch-off
"skip_broken" flag, and all commands, even broken ones, should be fed
by calling "feed_receive_hook()".
Add a new test case in t5516 as well.
Helped-by: Jiang Xin <zhiyou.jx@alibaba-inc.com>
Helped-by: Teng Long <dyroneteng@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Chen Bojun <bojun.cbj@alibaba-inc.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
`git fetch --negotiate-only` is an implementation detail of push
negotiation and, unlike most `git fetch` invocations, does not actually
update the main repository. Thus it should not update submodules even
if submodule recursion is enabled.
This is not just slow, it is wrong e.g. push negotiation with
"submodule.recurse=true" will cause submodules to be updated because it
invokes `git fetch --negotiate-only`.
Fix this by disabling submodule recursion if --negotiate-only was given.
Since this makes --negotiate-only and --recurse-submodules incompatible,
check for this invalid combination and die.
This does not use the "goto cleanup" introduced in the previous commit
because we want to recurse through submodules whenever a ref is fetched,
and this can happen without introducing new objects.
Signed-off-by: Glen Choo <chooglen@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Broken &&-chains in the test scripts have been corrected.
* es/test-chain-lint:
t6000-t9999: detect and signal failure within loop
t5000-t5999: detect and signal failure within loop
t4000-t4999: detect and signal failure within loop
t0000-t3999: detect and signal failure within loop
tests: simplify by dropping unnecessary `for` loops
tests: apply modern idiom for exiting loop upon failure
tests: apply modern idiom for signaling test failure
tests: fix broken &&-chains in `{...}` groups
tests: fix broken &&-chains in `$(...)` command substitutions
tests: fix broken &&-chains in compound statements
tests: use test_write_lines() to generate line-oriented output
tests: simplify construction of large blocks of text
t9107: use shell parameter expansion to avoid breaking &&-chain
t6300: make `%(raw:size) --shell` test more robust
t5516: drop unnecessary subshell and command invocation
t4202: clarify intent by creating expected content less cleverly
t1020: avoid aborting entire test script when one test fails
t1010: fix unnoticed failure on Windows
t/lib-pager: use sane_unset() to avoid breaking &&-chain
"git fetch" without the "--update-head-ok" option ought to protect
a checked out branch from getting updated, to prevent the working
tree that checks it out to go out of sync. The code was written
before the use of "git worktree" got widespread, and only checked
the branch that was checked out in the current worktree, which has
been updated.
(originally called ak/fetch-not-overwrite-any-current-branch)
* ak/protect-any-current-branch:
branch: protect branches checked out in all worktrees
receive-pack: protect current branch for bare repository worktree
receive-pack: clean dead code from update_worktree()
fetch: protect branches checked out in all worktrees
worktree: simplify find_shared_symref() memory ownership model
branch: lowercase error messages
receive-pack: lowercase error messages
fetch: lowercase error messages
To create its "expect" file, this test pipes into `sort` the output of
`git for-each-ref` and a copy of that same output but with a minor
textual transformation applied. To do so, it employs a subshell and
commands `cat` and `sed` even though the same result can be accomplished
by `sed` alone (without a subshell).
Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Reviewed-by: Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
A bare repository won’t have a working tree at "..", but it may still
have separate working trees created with git worktree. We should protect
the current branch of such working trees from being updated or deleted,
according to receive.denyCurrentBranch.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <andersk@mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Refuse to fetch into the currently checked out branch of any working
tree, not just the current one.
Fixes this previously reported bug:
https://lore.kernel.org/git/cb957174-5e9a-5603-ea9e-ac9b58a2eaad@mathema.de/
As a side effect of using find_shared_symref, we’ll also refuse the
fetch when we’re on a detached HEAD because we’re rebasing or bisecting
on the branch in question. This seems like a sensible change.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <andersk@mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
"git push remote-name" (that is, with no refspec given on the command
line) should push the refspecs in remote.remote-name.push. There is no
test case that checks this behavior in detached HEAD, so add one.
Signed-off-by: Glen Choo <chooglen@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Tan <jonathantanmy@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The original point of the GIT_REF_PARANOIA flag was to include broken
refs in iterations, so that possibly-destructive operations would not
silently ignore them (and would generally instead try to operate on the
oids and fail when the objects could not be accessed).
We already turned this on by default for some dangerous operations, like
"repack -ad" (where missing a reachability tip would mean dropping the
associated history). But it was not on for general use, even though it
could easily result in the spreading of corruption (e.g., imagine
cloning a repository which simply omits some of its refs because
their objects are missing; the result quietly succeeds even though you
did not clone everything!).
This patch turns on GIT_REF_PARANOIA by default. So a clone as mentioned
above would actually fail (upload-pack tells us about the broken ref,
and when we ask for the objects, pack-objects fails to deliver them).
This may be inconvenient when working with a corrupted repository, but:
- we are better off to err on the side of complaining about
corruption, and then provide mechanisms for explicitly loosening
safety.
- this is only one type of corruption anyway. If we are missing any
other objects in the history that _aren't_ ref tips, then we'd
behave similarly (happily show the ref, but then barf when we
started traversing).
We retain the GIT_REF_PARANOIA variable, but simply default it to "1"
instead of "0". That gives the user an escape hatch for loosening this
when working with a corrupt repository. It won't work across a remote
connection to upload-pack (because we can't necessarily set environment
variables on the remote), but there the client has other options (e.g.,
choosing which refs to fetch).
As a bonus, this also makes ref iteration faster in general (because we
don't have to call has_object_file() for each ref), though probably not
noticeably so in the general case. In a repo with a million refs, it
shaved a few hundred milliseconds off of upload-pack's advertisement;
that's noticeable, but most repos are not nearly that large.
The possible downside here is that any operation which iterates refs but
doesn't ever open their objects may now quietly claim to have X when the
object is corrupted (e.g., "git rev-list new-branch --not --all" will
treat a broken ref as uninteresting). But again, that's not really any
different than corruption below the ref level. We might have
refs/heads/old-branch as non-corrupt, but we are not actively checking
that we have the entire reachable history. Or the pointed-to object
could even be corrupted on-disk (but our "do we have it" check would
still succeed). In that sense, this is merely bringing ref-corruption in
line with general object corruption.
One alternative implementation would be to actually check for broken
refs, and then _immediately die_ if we see any. That would cause the
"rev-list --not --all" case above to abort immediately. But in many ways
that's the worst of all worlds:
- it still spends time looking up the objects an extra time
- it still doesn't catch corruption below the ref level
- it's even more inconvenient; with the current implementation of
GIT_REF_PARANOIA for something like upload-pack, we can make
the advertisement and let the client choose a non-broken piece of
history. If we bail as soon as we see a broken ref, they cannot even
see the advertisement.
The test changes here show some of the fallout. A non-destructive "git
repack -adk" now fails by default (but we can override it). Deleting a
broken ref now actually tells the hooks the correct "before" state,
rather than a confusing null oid.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Tan <jonathantanmy@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
A few tests in t5516 want to assert that we can delete a corrupted ref
whose pointed-to object is missing. They do so by using the "main"
branch, which is also pointed to by HEAD.
This does work, but only because of a subtle assumption about the
implementation. We do not block the deletion because of the invalid ref,
but we _also_ do not notice that the deleted branch is pointed to by
HEAD. And so the safety rule of "do not allow HEAD to be deleted in a
non-bare repository" does not kick in, and the test passes.
Let's instead use a non-HEAD branch. That still tests what we care about
here (deleting a corrupt ref), but without implicitly depending on our
failure to notice that we're deleting HEAD. That will future proof the
test against that behavior changing.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Tan <jonathantanmy@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Commit 477673d6f3 ("send-pack: support push negotiation", 2021-05-05)
did not test the case in which a remote advertises at least one ref. In
such a case, "remote_refs" in get_commons_through_negotiation() in
send-pack.c would also contain those refs with a zero ref->new_oid (in
addition to the refs being pushed with a nonzero ref->new_oid). Passing
them as negotiation tips to "git fetch" causes an error, so filter them
out.
(The exact error that would happen in "git fetch" in this case is a
segmentation fault, which is unwanted. This will be fixed in the
subsequent commit.)
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Tan <jonathantanmy@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>