Use constants from StandardCharsets instead of hard-coded strings
Instead of hard-coding the charset strings "US-ASCII", "UTF-8", and
"ISO-8859-1", use the corresponding constants from StandardCharsets.
UnsupportedEncodingException is not thrown when the StandardCharset
constants are used, so remove the now redundant handling.
Because the encoding names are no longer hard-coded strings, also
remove redundant $NON-NLS warning suppressions.
Also replace existing usages of the constants with static imports.
Change-Id: I0a4510d3d992db5e277f009a41434276f95bda4e
Signed-off-by: David Pursehouse <david.pursehouse@gmail.com>
RevCommit: Better support invalid encoding headers
With this support we no longer need the 'utf-8' alias. UTF-8 will be
automatically tried when the encoding header is not recognized and used
if the character sequence cleanly decodes as UTF-8.
Modernize some of the references to use StandardCharsets.
Change-Id: I4c0c88750475560e1f2263180c4a98eb8febeca0
Eclipse has some problem re-running single JUnit tests if
the tests are in Junit 3 format, but the JUnit 4 launcher
is used. This was quite unnecessary and the move was not
completed. We still have no JUnit4 test.
This completes the extermination of JUnit3. Most of the
work was global searce/replace using regular expression,
followed by numerous invocarions of quick-fix and organize
imports and verification that we had the same number of
tests before and after.
- Annotations were introduced.
- All references to JUnit3 classes removed
- Half-good replacement for getting the test name. This was
needed to make the TestRngs work. The initialization of
TestRngs was also made lazily since we can not longer find
out the test name in runtime in the @Before methods.
- Renamed test classes to end with Test, with the exception
of TestTranslateBundle, which fails from Maven
- Moved JGitTestUtil to the junit support bundle
Change-Id: Iddcd3da6ca927a7be773a9c63ebf8bb2147e2d13
Signed-off-by: Robin Rosenberg <robin.rosenberg@dewire.com>
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Correct CommitBuilder, TagBuilder method to be build()
The correct names for these is build(), as that is what a Java
developer will expect given the "builder" pattern.
Bug: 323541
Change-Id: I35042bdc95a955beeaee29e54bde10e4240b2a71
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Reviewed-by: Chris Aniszczyk <caniszczyk@gmail.com>
Move commit and tag formatting to CommitBuilder, TagBuilder
These objects should be responsible for their own formatting,
rather than delegating it to some obtuse type called ObjectInserter.
While we are at it, simplify the way we insert these into a database.
Passing in the type and calling format in application code turned
out to be a huge mistake in terms of ease-of-use of the insert API.
Change-Id: Id5bb95ee56aa2a002243e9b7853b84ec8df1d7bf
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Since these types no longer support reading, calling them a Builder
is a better description of what they do. They help the caller to
build a commit or a tag object.
Change-Id: I53cae5a800a66ea1721b0fe5e702599df31da05d
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Callers might have a canonical tag encoding on hand that they
wish to convert into a clean structure for presentation purposes,
and the object may not be available in a repository. (E.g. maybe
its a "draft" tag being written in an editor.)
Change-Id: I387a462afb70754aa7ee20891e6c0262438fdf32
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Relax ObjectChecker to permit missing tagger lines
Annotated tags created with C Git versions before the introduction
of c818566 ([PATCH] Update tags to record who made them, 2005-07-14),
do not have a "tagger" line present in the object header. This line
did not appear in C Git until v0.99.1~9.
Ancient projects such as the Linux kernel contain such tags, for
example Linux 2.6.12 is older than when this feature first appeared
in C Git. Linux v2.6.13-rc4 in late July 2005 is the first kernel
version tag to actually contain a tagger line.
It is therefore acceptable for the header to be missing, and for
the RevTag.getTaggerIdent() method to return null.
Since the Javadoc for getTaggerIdent() already explained that the
identity may be null, we just need to test that this is true when
the header is missing, and allow the ObjectChecker to pass anyway.
Change-Id: I34ba82e0624a0d1a7edcf62ffba72260af6f7e5d
See: http://code.google.com/p/gerrit/issues/detail?id=399
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Per CQ 3448 this is the initial contribution of the JGit project
to eclipse.org. It is derived from the historical JGit repository
at commit 3a2dd9921c.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>