From Oracle's "Defining an interface":
"All abstract, default, and static methods in an interface are
implicitly public, so you can omit the public modifier."
(Without any modifier, the interface methods are also abstract, so we
omit also the "abstract")
"In addition, an interface can contain constant declarations. All
constant values defined in an interface are implicitly public, static,
and final. Once again, you can omit these modifiers."
This makes the code more consistent. Now all interfaces under
org.eclipse.jgit follow the guidelines.
Change-Id: I4fe6deb111899ec1b4318ab5a6050f3851fa1fd3
Signed-off-by: Ivan Frade <ifrade@google.com>
Enable and fix 'Should be tagged with @Override' warning
Set missingOverrideAnnotation=warning in Eclipse compiler preferences
which enables the warning:
The method <method> of type <type> should be tagged with @Override
since it actually overrides a superclass method
Justification for this warning is described in:
http://stackoverflow.com/a/94411/381622
Enabling this causes in excess of 1000 warnings across the entire
code-base. They are very easy to fix automatically with Eclipse's
"Quick Fix" tool.
Fix all of them except 2 which cause compilation failure when the
project is built with mvn; add TODO comments on those for further
investigation.
Change-Id: I5772061041fd361fe93137fd8b0ad356e748a29c
Signed-off-by: David Pursehouse <david.pursehouse@gmail.com>
Allow RepositoryResolver to throw ServiceMayNotContinueException
Implementations may want to send an error message to the user, which
doesn't really fit with any of the existing exception types.
ServiceMayNotContinueException, on the other hand, is documented as
always containing a user-visible error string, so use that.
Modify the git and HTTP transport mechanisms to properly relay this
message to the end user.
Change-Id: I362e67ea46102a145bf2c6284d38788537c9735f
Using a resolver and factory pattern for the anonymous git:// Daemon
class makes transport.Daemon more useful on non-file storage systems,
or in embedded applications where the caller wants more precise
control over the work tasks constructed within the daemon.
Rather than defining new interfaces, move the existing HTTP ones
into transport.resolver and make them generic on the connection
handle type. For HTTP, continue to use HttpServletRequest, and
for transport.Daemon use DaemonClient.
To remain compatible with transport.Daemon, FileResolver needs to
learn how to use multiple base directories, and how to export any
Repository instance at a fixed name.
Change-Id: I1efa6b2bd7c6567e983fbbf346947238ea2e847e
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
This is a simple HTTP server that provides the minimum server side
support required for dumb (non-git aware) transport clients.
We produce the info/refs and objects/info/packs file on the fly
from the local repository state, but otherwise serve data as raw
files from the on-disk structure.
In the future we could better optimize the FileSender class and the
servlets that use it to take advantage of direct file to network
APIs in more advanced servlet containers like Jetty.
Our glue package borrows the idea of a micro embedded DSL from
Google Guice and uses it to configure a collection of Filters
and HttpServlets, all of which are matched against requests using
regular expressions. If a subgroup exists in the pattern, it is
extracted and used for the path info component of the request.
Change-Id: Ia0f1a425d07d035e344ae54faf8aeb04763e7487
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>