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>
Clients can request smart push support by examining the info/refs URL
with the service parameter set to the magic git-receive-pack string:
GET /$GIT_DIR/info/refs?service=git-receive-pack HTTP/1.1
The response is formatted with the receive pack capabilities, using
the standard packet line formatter. A special header block is put
in front of the standard receive-pack advertisement to let clients
know the service was recognized and is supported.
If the requested service is disabled an authorization status code is
returned, allowing the user agent to retry once they have obtained
credentials from a human, in case authentication is required by
the configured ReceivePackFactory implementation.
Change-Id: Ie4f6e0c7b68a68ec4b7cdd5072f91dd406210d4f
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>