Commit 05cd988dce ("wrapper: add a helper to generate numbers from a
CSPRNG", 2022-01-17) added a csprng_bytes() function which used one
of several interfaces to provide a source of cryptographically secure
pseudorandom numbers. The CSPRNG_METHOD make variable was provided to
determine the choice of available 'backends' for the source of random
bytes.
Commit 05cd988dce did not set CSPRNG_METHOD in the Linux section of
the config.mak.uname file, so it defaults to using '/dev/urandom' as
the source of random bytes. The 'backend' values which could be used
on Linux are 'arc4random', 'getrandom' or 'getentropy' ('openssl' is
an option, but seems to be discouraged).
The arc4random routines (arc4random_buf() is the one actually used) were
added to glibc in version 2.36, while both getrandom() and getentropy()
were included in 2.25. So, some of the more up-to-date distributions of
Linux (eg Debian 12, Ubuntu 24.04) would be able to use the 'arc4random'
setting. All currently supported distributions have glibc 2.25 or later
(RHEL 8 has v2.28) and, therefore, have support for the 'getrandom' and
'getentropy' settings.
The arc4random routines on the *BSDs (along with cygwin) implement the
ChaCha20 stream cipher algorithm (see RFC8439) in userspace, rather than
as a system call, and are thus somewhat faster (having avoided a context
switch to the kernel). In contrast, on Linux all three functions are
simple wrappers around the same kernel CSPRNG syscall.
If the meson build system is used on a newer platform, then they will be
configured to use 'arc4random', whereas the make build will currently
default to using '/dev/urandom' on Linux. Since there is no advantage,
in terms of performance, to the 'arc4random' setting, the 'getrandom'
setting should be preferred from an availability perspective. (Also, the
current uses of csprng_bytes() are not in any hot path).
In order to set an appropriate default, set the CSPRNG_METHOD build
variable to 'getrandom' in the Linux section of the 'config.mak.uname'
file.
Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsayjones.plus.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Incorrect sorting of refs with bytes with high-bit set on platforms
with signed char led to a BUG, which has been corrected.
* ps/refname-avail-check-optim:
refs/packed: fix BUG when seeking refs with UTF-8 characters
Remove remnants of the recursive merge strategy backend, which was
superseded by the ort merge strategy.
* en/merge-recursive-debug:
builtin/{merge,rebase,revert}: remove GIT_TEST_MERGE_ALGORITHM
tests: remove GIT_TEST_MERGE_ALGORITHM and test_expect_merge_algorithm
merge-recursive.[ch]: thoroughly debug these
merge, sequencer: switch recursive merges over to ort
sequencer: switch non-recursive merges over to ort
merge-ort: enable diff-algorithms other than histogram
builtin/merge-recursive: switch to using merge_ort_generic()
checkout: replace merge_trees() with merge_ort_nonrecursive()
"git blame --porcelain" mode now talks about unblamable lines and
lines that are blamed to an ignored commit.
* kn/blame-porcelain-unblamable:
blame: print unblamable and ignored commits in porcelain mode
"git fetch [<remote>]" with only the configured fetch refspec
should be the only thing to update refs/remotes/<remote>/HEAD,
but the code was overly eager to do so in other cases.
* jk/fetch-follow-remote-head-fix:
fetch: make set_head() call easier to read
fetch: don't ask for remote HEAD if followRemoteHEAD is "never"
fetch: only respect followRemoteHEAD with configured refspecs
It was reported that "t5620-backfill.sh" fails on s390x and sparc64 in a
test that exercises the "--min-batch-size" command line option. The
symptom was that the option didn't seem to have an effect: we didn't
fetch objects with a batch size of 20, but instead fetched all objects
at once.
As it turns out, the root cause is that `--min-batch-size` uses
`OPT_INTEGER()` to parse the command line option. While this macro
expects the caller to pass a pointer to an integer, we instead pass a
pointer to a `size_t`. This coincidentally works on most platforms, but
it breaks apart on the mentioned platforms because they are big endian.
This issue isn't specific to git-backfill(1): there are a couple of
other places where we have the same type confusion going on. This
indicates that the issue really is the interface that the parse-options
subsystem provides -- it is simply too easy to get this wrong as there
isn't any kind of compiler warning, and things just work on the most
common systems.
Address the systemic issue by introducing two new build asserts
`BARF_UNLESS_SIGNED()` and `BARF_UNLESS_UNSIGNED()`. As the names
already hint at, those macros will cause a compiler error when passed a
value that is not signed or unsigned, respectively.
Adapt `OPT_INTEGER()`, `OPT_UNSIGNED()` as well as `OPT_MAGNITUDE()` to
use those asserts. This uncovers a small set of sites where we indeed
have the same bug as in git-backfill(1). Adapt all of them to use the
correct option.
Reported-by: Todd Zullinger <tmz@pobox.com>
Reported-by: John Paul Adrian Glaubitz <glaubitz@physik.fu-berlin.de>
Helped-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder.dev@gmail.com>
Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This commit is the equivalent to the preceding commit, but instead of
introducing precision handling for `OPTION_INTEGER` we introduce it for
`OPTION_UNSIGNED`.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The `OPTION_INTEGER` option type accepts a signed integer. The type of
the underlying integer is a simple `int`, which restricts the range of
values accepted by such options. But there is a catch: because the
caller provides a pointer to the value via the `.value` field, which is
a simple void pointer. This has two consequences:
- There is no check whether the passed value is sufficiently long to
store the entire range of `int`. This can lead to integer wraparound
in the best case and out-of-bounds writes in the worst case.
- Even when a caller knows that they want to store a value larger than
`INT_MAX` they don't have a way to do so.
In practice this doesn't tend to be a huge issue because users typically
don't end up passing huge values to most commands. But the parsing logic
is demonstrably broken, and it is too easy to get the calling convention
wrong.
Improve the situation by introducing a new `precision` field into the
structure. This field gets assigned automatically by `OPT_INTEGER_F()`
and tracks the size of the passed value. Like this it becomes possible
for the caller to pass arbitrarily-sized integers and the underlying
logic knows to handle it correctly by doing range checks. Furthermore,
convert the code to use `strtoimax()` intstead of `strtol()` so that we
can also parse values larger than `LONG_MAX`.
Note that we do not yet assert signedness of the passed variable, which
is another source of bugs. This will be handled in a subsequent commit.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
With the preceding commit, `OPT_INTEGER()` has learned to support unit
factors. Consequently, the major differencen between `OPT_INTEGER()` and
`OPT_MAGNITUDE()` isn't the support of unit factors anymore, as both of
them do support them now. Instead, the difference is that one handles
signed and the other handles unsigned integers.
Adapt the name of `OPT_MAGNITUDE()` accordingly by renaming it to
`OPT_UNSIGNED()`.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
There are two main differences between `OPT_INTEGER()` and
`OPT_MAGNITUDE()`:
- The former parses signed integers whereas the latter parses unsigned
integers.
- The latter parses unit factors like 'k', 'm' or 'g'.
While the first difference makes obvious sense, there isn't really a
good reason why signed integers shouldn't support unit factors, too.
This inconsistency will also become a bit of a problem with subsequent
commits, where we will fix a couple of callsites that pass an unsigned
integer to `OPT_INTEGER()`. There are three options:
- We could adapt those users to instead pass a signed integer, but
this would needlessly extend the range of accepted integer values.
- We could convert them to use `OPT_MAGNITUDE()`, as it only accepts
unsigned integers. But now we have the inconsistency that we also
start to accept unit factors.
- We could introduce `OPT_UNSIGNED()` as equivalent to `OPT_INTEGER()`
so that it knows to only accept unsigned integers without unit
suffix.
Introducing a whole new option type feels a bit excessive. There also
isn't really a good reason why `OPT_INTEGER()` cannot be extended to
also accept unit factors: all valid values passed to such options cannot
have a unit factors right now, so there wouldn't be any ambiguity.
Refactor `OPT_INTEGER()` to use `git_parse_int()`, which knows to
interpret unit factors. This removes the inconsistency between the
signed and unsigned options so that we can easily fix up callsites that
pass the wrong integer type right now.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
While we expose macros for most of our different option types understood
by the "parse-options" subsystem, not every combination of fields that
has one as that would otherwise quickly lead to an explosion of macros.
Instead, we just initialize structures manually for those variants of
fields that don't have a macro.
Callsites that open-code these structure initialization don't use
designated initializers though and instead just provide values for each
of the fields that they want to initialize. This has three significant
downsides:
- Callsites need to specify all values up to the last field that they
care about. This often includes fields that should simply be left at
their default zero-initialized state, which adds distraction.
- Any reader not deeply familiar with the layout of the structure
has a hard time figuring out what the respective initializers mean.
- Reordering or introducing new fields in the middle of the structure
is impossible without adapting all callsites.
Convert all sites to instead use designated initializers, which we have
started using in our codebase quite a while ago. This allows us to skip
any default-initialized fields, gives the reader context by specifying
the field names and allows us to reorder or introduce new fields where
we want to.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
We accept a maximum value in `git_parse_signed()` that restricts the
range of accepted integers. As the intent is to pass `INT*_MAX` values
here, this maximum doesn't only act as the upper bound, but also as the
implicit lower bound of the accepted range.
This lower bound is calculated by negating the maximum. But given that
the maximum value of a signed integer with N bits is `2^(N-1)-1` whereas
the minimum value is `-2^(N-1)` we have an off-by-one error in the lower
bound.
Fix this off-by-one error by using `-max - 1` as lower bound instead.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The arc4random_buf() function has been available in cygwin since
about 2016 (somewhere in the v2.x branch). Set the CSPRNG_METHOD
build variable to 'arc4random', in the cygwin section, to enable
the use of this cryptographically-secure pseudorandom number
function. Note that the autoconf and new meson builds also enable
this function.
Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsayjones.plus.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Although sysinfo() is a 'Linux only' function, cygwin provides an
implementation which appears to be functional. The assumption that
this function is Linux only is reflected in the way the HAVE_SYSINFO
build variable is handled by the Makefile and config.mak.uname.
Rework the setting of HAVE_SYSINFO in the Linux section of the system
specific config file, along with the corresponding setting of the
BASIC_CFLAGS in the Makefile. Add the setting of HAVE_SYSINFO to the
cygwin section of 'config.mak.uname'. While here, add a test for the
sysinfo() function to the autoconf build system.
Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsayjones.plus.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The man page for sysinfo(2) on Linux states that (from v2.3.48) the
sizes of the memory and swap fields, of the returned structure, are
given as multiples of 'mem_unit' bytes. In earlier versions (prior to
v2.3.23 on i386 in particular), the 'mem_unit' field was not part of
the structure, and all sizes were measured in bytes. The man page does
not discuss the motivation for this change, but it is possible that the
change was intended for the, relatively rare, 32-bit platform with more
than 4GB of memory.
The total_ram() function makes the assumption that the 'totalram' field
of the 'struct sysinfo' is measured in bytes, or alternatively that the
'mem_unit' field is always equal to one. Having writen a program to call
the sysinfo() function and print the structure fields, it seems that, on
Linux x84_64 and i686 anyway, the 'mem_unit' field is indeed set to one
(note that the 32-bit system had only 2GB ram). However, cygwin also has
an sysinfo() implementation, which gives the following values:
$ ./sysinfo
uptime: 21381
loads: 0, 0, 0
total ram: 2074637
free ram: 843237
shared ram: 0
buffer ram: 0
total swap: 327680
free swap: 306932
procs: 15
total high: 0
free high: 0
mem_unit: 4096
total ram: 8497713152
$
[This laptop has 8GB ram, so a little bit seems to be missing. ;) ]
Modify the total_ram() function to allow for the possibility that the
memory size is not specified in bytes (ie 'mem_unit' is greater than
one).
Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsayjones.plus.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Cygwin supports the clock_gettime() function, along with the associated
CLOCK_MONOTONIC preprocessor symbol. The autoconf and meson builds both
enable the use of those symbols. In order to have the same configuration
for the make builds, add the HAVE_CLOCK_GETTIME and HAVE_CLOCK_MONOTONIC
build variables to the cygwin section of the config.mak.uname file.
Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsayjones.plus.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Cygwin has provided the getdelim() function as far back as (at least)
2011. The autoconf and meson builds enable the use of this symbol.
In order to have the same configuration for autoconf, meson and make,
enable the HAVE_GETDELIM build variable in the cygwin section of the
config.mak.uname file.
Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsayjones.plus.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Commit 92f63d2b05 ("Cygwin 1.7 needs compat/regex", 2013-07-19) set
the NO_REGEX build variable because the platform regex library failed
some of the tests (t4018 and t4034), which passed just fine with the
compat library.
After some time (maybe a year or two), the platform library had been
updated (with an import from FreeBSD, I believe) and now passed the full
test-suite. This would be about the time of the v1.7 -> v2.0 transition
in 2015. I had a patch ready to send, but just didn't get around to
submitting it to the list. At some point in the interim, the official
cygwin git package used the autoconf build system, which sets the
NO_REGEX variable to use the platform regex library functions. The new
meson build system does likewise.
The cygwin platform regex library, in addition to now passing the tests
which formerly failed, now passes an 'test_expect_failure' test in the
t7815-grep-binary test file. In particular, test #12 'git grep .fi a'
which determines that the regex pattern '.' matches a NUL character.
The commit f96e56733a ("grep: use REG_STARTEND for all matching if
available", 2010-05-22) added the test in question, but it does not
give any indication as to why the test was framed as an expected fail,
rather than a 'positive' test that the 'git grep' command fails to
match a NUL. Note that the previous test #11 was also originally
marked in that commit as a 'test_expect_failure', but was flipped to
an 'success' test in commit 7e36de5859 ("t/t7008-grep-binary.sh: un-TODO
a test that needs REG_STARTEND", 2010-08-17).
In order to produce the same NO_REGEX configuration from autoconf, meson
and make, modify config.mak.uname to only set NO_REGEX for cygwin v1.7.
In addition, skip test t7815.12 on cygwin, by adding the !CYGWIN pre-
requisite to the test header, which (among other things) removes an
'...; please update test(s)' comment.
Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsayjones.plus.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Commit 817151e61a ("Rename safe_strncpy() to strlcpy().", 2006-06-24)
added the NO_STRLCPY make variable to allow the conditional use of
the gitstrlcpy() compat function on those platforms which didn't
provide the 'standard' strlcpy() function.
Recently, in the summer of 2023, the strlcpy() and strlcat() functions
were added to the glibc library (v2.38), so some of the more up-to-date
Linux distributions no longer need to set NO_STRLCPY. For example, both
Ubuntu 24.04 LTS and RHEL 10 beta have glibc v2.39. However, several
distributions, which are still within their support window, have an
earlier version and must still use the 'compat' version of strlcpy().
If the meson or autoconf build systems are used on newer platforms, then
they will be configured to to use strlcpy() from glibc, whereas the make
build will always choose the 'compat' function instead. Add a note to
the config.mak.uname file, in the Linux section, to prompt make users to
override NO_STRLCPY in the config.mak file, if appropriate.
Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsayjones.plus.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Commit d19e3a5b21 ("Makefile: add NEEDS_LIBRT to optionally link with
librt", 2016-07-07) introduced the NEEDS_LIBRT build variable to
disassociate the HAVE_CLOCK_GETTIME variable with the unconditional
linking of the librt library. At one time, the clock_gettime() function
was not available as part of the libc library and (on some unix systems)
required linking with librt.
Commit 52fcec75ce ("config.mak.uname: define NEEDS_LIBRT under Linux, for
now", 2016-07-10) set the NEEDS_LIBRT variable in the Linux section of
the config.mak.uname file, since Debian 7 (wheezy) was one of the few
remaining distributions, with glibc 2.13, that required linking with
librt for clock_gettime(). Note that from glibc version 2.17, this is no
longer necessary.
Note that Debian 7.0 was released on May 4th, 2013 and benefited from
long term support until May 2018 when it went end-of-life. Since that
time, Linux distributions use a more up-to-date library, for example:
Distribution version end of support
Debian 8 2.19 30th June 2020
RHEL 8 2.28 31st May 2024 *
Ubuntu 16.04 2.23 30th Apr 2021
* paid 'Maintenance support' ends 31st May 2029
Since it is no longer required, remove NEEDS_LIBRT from the Makefile and
config.mak.uname.
Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsayjones.plus.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The build variable DEFAULT_HELP_FORMAT has an appropriate default
('man') set in the code, so there is no need to pass the -Define on
the compiler command-line, unless the build requires a non-standard
value.
In addition, on windows the make build overrides the default help
format to 'html', rather than 'man', in the 'config.mak.uname' file.
In order to suppress the -Define on the C compiler command-line, only
add the -Define to the 'libgit_c_args' variable when the requested
value is not the standard 'man'. In order to override the default value
on windows, add a 'platform' value to the 'default_help_format' combo
option and set it as the default choice. When this option is set to
'platform', use the 'host_machine.system()' method call to determine the
appropriate default value for the host system.
Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsayjones.plus.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Some preprocessor -Defines have defaults set in the source code when
they have not been provided to the C compiler. In this case, there is
no need to pass them on the command-line, unless the build requires a
non-standard value.
The build variables for DEFAULT_EDITOR and DEFAULT_PAGER have appropriate
defaults ('vi' and 'less') set in the code. Add the preprocessor -Defines
to the 'libgit_c_args' only if the values set with the corresponding
'options' are different to these standard values.
Also, the 'git-var' documentation contains some conditional text which
documents the chosen compiled in value, which would not read well for
the standard values. Similar to the above, only add the corresponding
'-a' attribute arguments to the 'asciidoc_common_options' variable, if
the values set in the 'options' are different to these standard values.
Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsayjones.plus.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Several build variables only have any meaning when the RUNTIME_PREFIX
variable has been set. In particular, the following build variables are
otherwise ignored:
HAVE_BSD_KERN_PROC_SYSCTL
PROCFS_EXECUTABLE_PATH
HAVE_NS_GET_EXECUTABLE_PATH
HAVE_ZOS_GET_EXECUTABLE_PATH
HAVE_WPGMPTR
Make setting BASIC_CFLAGS, for each of these variables, conditional on
the RUNTIME_PREFIX being defined.
Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsayjones.plus.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Commit 9371322a60 ("sparse: suppress some \"using sizeof on a function\"
warnings", 2013-10-06) used target-specific variable assignments to add
-DCURL_DISABLE_TYPECHECK to SPARSE_FLAGS for each of the files affected
by the "typecheck-gcc.h" warnings. (http-push.c, http.c, http-walker.c
and remote-curl.c).
These warnings are only issued by sparse, and not by gcc, so we do not
want to disable the 'type checking' for non-sparse targets. The meson
build does not provide any sparse targets, so there is no need to use
the CURL_DISABLE_TYPECHECK preprocessor flag with the c compiler.
In order to re-enable the curl 'type checking' in the meson build, remove
the assignment of -DCURL_DISABLE_TYPECHECK to libgit_c_args.
Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsayjones.plus.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
"git cat-file --batch" and friends learned to allow "--filter=" to
omit certain objects, just like the transport layer does.
* ps/cat-file-filter-batch:
builtin/cat-file: use bitmaps to efficiently filter by object type
builtin/cat-file: deduplicate logic to iterate over all objects
pack-bitmap: introduce function to check whether a pack is bitmapped
pack-bitmap: add function to iterate over filtered bitmapped objects
pack-bitmap: allow passing payloads to `show_reachable_fn()`
builtin/cat-file: support "object:type=" objects filter
builtin/cat-file: support "blob:limit=" objects filter
builtin/cat-file: support "blob:none" objects filter
builtin/cat-file: wire up an option to filter objects
builtin/cat-file: introduce function to report object status
builtin/cat-file: rename variable that tracks usage
"make test" used to have a hard dependency on (basic) Perl; tests
have been rewritten help environment with NO_PERL test the build as
much as possible.
* ps/test-wo-perl-prereq:
t5703: refactor test to not depend on Perl
t5316: refactor `max_chain()` to not depend on Perl
t0210: refactor trace2 scrubbing to not use Perl
t0021: refactor `generate_random_characters()` to not depend on Perl
t/lib-httpd: refactor "one-time-perl" CGI script to not depend on Perl
t/lib-t6000: refactor `name_from_description()` to not depend on Perl
t/lib-gpg: refactor `sanitize_pgp()` to not depend on Perl
t: refactor tests depending on Perl for textconv scripts
t: refactor tests depending on Perl to print data
t: refactor tests depending on Perl substitution operator
t: refactor tests depending on Perl transliteration operator
Makefile: stop requiring Perl when running tests
meson: stop requiring Perl when tests are enabled
t: adapt existing PERL prerequisites
t: introduce PERL_TEST_HELPERS prerequisite
t: adapt `test_readlink()` to not use Perl
t: adapt `test_copy_bytes()` to not use Perl
t: adapt character translation helpers to not use Perl
t: refactor environment sanitization to not use Perl
t: skip chain lint when PERL_PATH is unset
"git help --build-options" reports SHA-1 and SHA-256 backends used
in the build.
* jt/help-sha-backend-info-in-build-options:
help: include unsafe SHA-1 build info in version
help: include SHA implementation in version info
Updating multiple references have only been possible in all-or-none
fashion with transactions, but it can be more efficient to batch
multiple updates even when some of them are allowed to fail in a
best-effort manner. A new "best effort batches of updates" mode
has been introduced.
* kn/non-transactional-batch-updates:
update-ref: add --batch-updates flag for stdin mode
refs: support rejection in batch updates during F/D checks
refs: implement batch reference update support
refs: introduce enum-based transaction error types
refs/reftable: extract code from the transaction preparation
refs/files: remove duplicate duplicates check
refs: move duplicate refname update check to generic layer
refs/files: remove redundant check in split_symref_update()
Auth-related (and unrelated) error handling in send-email has been
made more robust.
* zy/send-email-error-handling:
send-email: finer-grained SMTP error handling
send-email: capture errors in an eval {} block
"git rev-list" learns machine-parsable output format that delimits
each field with NUL.
* jt/rev-list-z:
rev-list: support NUL-delimited --missing option
rev-list: support NUL-delimited --boundary option
rev-list: support delimiting objects with NUL bytes
rev-list: refactor early option parsing
rev-list: inline `show_object_with_name()` in `show_object()`
Random build fixes.
* ps/misc-build-fixes:
ci: use Visual Studio for win+meson job on GitHub Workflows
meson: distinguish build and target host binaries
meson: respect 'tests' build option in contrib
gitweb: fix generation of "gitweb.js"
meson: fix handling of '-Dcurl=auto'
A few traditional unit tests have been rewritten to use the clar
framework.
* sk/clar-trailer-urlmatch-norm-test:
t/unit-tests: convert urlmatch-normalization test to clar
t/unit-tests: convert trailer test to use clar
The tests use grep to search the output of `git tag` for tagnames they
expect to exist, which can incorrectly pass if an unxpected tag
has the expected tag as its substring. We fix this by using `git
show-ref --verify` instead.
Additionally, we add a negative test to verify that a possible
uninteded tag does not show up in the imported repository.
This change also fixes an additional problem, where piping the
output of `git tag` caused the exit codes to be lost.
Signed-off-by: Anthony Wang <anthonywang513@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
If a user wishes to disable hooks, then they can do so using the
established pattern of setting 'core.hooksPath' to /dev/null. This is
already tested in t1350-config-hooks-path.sh, but has not previously
been visible in the documentation.
Update the documentation to include this as an option.
Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The "cmd-list.perl" script is used to extract the list of commands part
of a specific category and extracts the description of each command from
its respective manpage. The generated output is then included in git(1)
to list all Git commands.
The script is written in Perl. Refactor it to use shell scripting
exclusively so that we can get rid of the mandatory dependency on Perl
to build our documentation.
The converted script is slower compared to its Perl implementation. But
by being careful and not spawning external commands in `format_one ()`
we can mitigate the performance hit to a reasonable level:
Benchmark 1: Perl
Time (mean ± σ): 10.3 ms ± 0.2 ms [User: 7.0 ms, System: 3.3 ms]
Range (min … max): 10.0 ms … 11.1 ms 200 runs
Benchmark 2: Shell
Time (mean ± σ): 74.4 ms ± 0.4 ms [User: 48.6 ms, System: 24.7 ms]
Range (min … max): 73.1 ms … 75.5 ms 200 runs
Summary
Perl ran
7.23 ± 0.13 times faster than Shell
While a sevenfold slowdown is significant, the benefit of not requiring
Perl for a fully-functioning Git installation outweighs waiting a couple
of milliseconds longer during the build process.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The "fix-texi.perl" script is used to fix up the output of
`docbook2x-texi`:
- It changes the filename to be "git.info".
- It changes the directory category and entry.
The script is written in Perl, but it can be rather trivially converted
to a shell script. Do so to remove the dependency on Perl for building
the user manual.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
While git-request-pull(1) is written as a shell script, for it to
function we depend on Perl being available. The script gets installed
unconditionally though, regardless of whether or not Perl is even
available on the system. When it's not available, the `@PERL_PATH@`
variable may be substituted with a nonexistent executable path and thus
cause the script to fail.
Refactor the script so that it does not depend on Perl at all anymore.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
While git-filter-branch(1) is written as a shell script, the
`--state-branch` feature depends on Perl to save and extract the object
ID mappings. This can lead to subtle breakage though:
- We execute `perl` directly without respecting the `PERL_PATH`
configured by the distribution. As such, it may happen that we use
the wrong version of Perl.
- We install the script unchanged even if Perl isn't available at all
on the system, so using `--state-branch` would lead to failure
altogether in that case.
Fix this by dropping Perl and instead implementing the feature with
shell scripting exclusively.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>