IgnoreNode: include path to file for invalid .gitignore patterns
Include the full file path of the .gitignore file and the line number
of the invalid pattern. Also include the pattern itself.
.gitignore files inside the repository are reported with their
repository-relative path; files outside (from git config
core.excludesFile or .git/info/exclude) are reported with their
full absolute path.
Bug: 571143
Change-Id: Ibe5969679bc22cff923c62e3ab9801d90d6d06d1
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
Wrap the Files.list returned Stream in a try-with-resources block
Adds a new FileUtils.hasFiles(Path) helper method to correctly handle
the Files.list returned Stream.
These errors were found by compiling the code using JDK11's
javac compiler.
Change-Id: Ie8017fa54eb56afc2e939a2988d8b2c5032cd00f
Signed-off-by: Terry Parker <tparker@google.com>
[spotbugs] Fix potential NPE in WorkingTreeIterator#isModified
File#list can return null. Fix the potential NPE by using Files#list
which is also faster since it retrieves directory entries lazily while
File#list retrieves them eagerly.
Change-Id: Idf4bda398861c647587e357326b8bc8b587a2584
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
This enables EGit to override with a lenient variant that logs the
problem and continues with the default value. EGit needs this because
otherwise a corrupt core.excludesFile entry can render the whole UI
unusable (until the git config is fixed) because any use of the
WorkingTreeIterator will throw an InvalidPathException.
This is not a problem on OS X, where all characters are allowed in
file names. But on Windows some characters are forbidden... see bug
567296. The message of the InvalidPathException is not helpful since
it doesn't point to the origin of the problem. EGit can log a much
better message indicating the offending config file and entry in the
Eclipse error log, where the user can see it.
Bug: 567309
Change-Id: I4e57afa715ff3aaa52cd04b5733f69e53af5b1e0
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
DiffFormatter: correctly deal with tracked files in ignored folders
In JGit 5.0, the FileTreeIterator was changed to skip ignored folders
by default. To catch tracked files inside ignored folders, the tree
walk needs to have a DirCacheIterator, and the FileTreeIterator has
to know about that DirCacheIterator via setDirCacheIterator(). (Or
the optimization has to be switched off explicitly via
setWalkIgnoredDirectories(true).)
Skipping ignored directories is an important optimization in some
cases, for instance in node.js/npm projects, where we'd otherwise
traverse the whole huge and deep hierarchy of the typically ignored
node_modules folder.
While all uses of WorkingTreeIterator in JGit had been adapted,
DiffFormatter was forgotten. To make it work correctly (again) also
for such cases, make it set up a WorkingTreeeIterator automatically,
and make sure the WorkingTreeSource can find such files, too. Also
pass the repository to the TreeWalks used inside the DiffFormatter
to pick up the correct attributes, filters, and line-ending settings.
Bug: 565081
Change-Id: Ie88ac81166dc396ba28b83313964c1712b6ca199
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
Handle non-normalized index also for executable files
Commit 60cf85a4 corrected the handling of check-in for files where
the index version is non-normalized, i.e., contains CR-LF line endings.
However, it did so only for regular files, not executable files.
Bug: 561438
Change-Id: I372cc990c5efeb00315460f36459c0652d5d1e77
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
Reorder modifiers to follow Java Language Specification
The Java Language Specification recommends listing modifiers in
the following order:
1. Annotations
2. public
3. protected
4. private
5. abstract
6. static
7. final
8. transient
9. volatile
10. synchronized
11. native
12. strictfp
Not following this convention has no technical impact, but will reduce
the code's readability because most developers are used to the standard
order.
This was detected using SonarLint.
Change-Id: I9cddecb4f4234dae1021b677e915be23d349a380
Signed-off-by: David Pursehouse <david.pursehouse@gmail.com>
Enable UnusedException at ERROR level which causes the build to fail
in many places with:
[UnusedException] This catch block catches an symbol and re-throws
another, but swallows the caught symbol rather than setting it as a
cause. This can make debugging harder.
Fix it by setting the caught exception as cause on the subsequently
thrown exception.
Note: The grammatically incorrect error message is copy-pasted as-is
from the version of ErrorProne currently used in Bazel; it has been
fixed by [1] in the latest version.
[1] https://github.com/google/error-prone/commit/d57a39c
Change-Id: I11ed38243091fc12f64f1b2db404ba3f1d2e98b5
Signed-off-by: David Pursehouse <david.pursehouse@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Enable and fix "Statement unnecessarily nested within else clause" warnings
Since [1] the gerrit project includes jgit as a submodule, and has this
warning enabled, resulting in 100s of warnings in the console.
Also enable the warning here, and fix them.
At the same time, add missing braces around adjacent and nearby one-line
blocks.
[1] https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/c/gerrit/+/227897
Change-Id: I81df3fc7ed6eedf6874ce1a3bedfa727a1897e4c
Signed-off-by: David Pursehouse <david.pursehouse@gmail.com>
WorkingTreeIterator: handle different timestamp resolutions
Older JGit stored only milliseconds timestamps in the index. Newer
JGit may get finer timestamps from the file system. This leads to
slow index diffs when a new JGit runs against an index produced
by older JGit because many timestamps will differ and JGit will
then do many content checks. See [1].
Handle this migration case by only comparing milliseconds if the
index entry has only millisecond precision.
The inverse may also occur; also compare only milliseconds if the
file timestamp has only millisecond precision.
Do the same also for microsecond resolution. On Windows, NTFS may
provide 100ns resolution and may be used by external programs writing
the index, but Java's WindowsFileAttributes may provide only
microseconds.
File timestamp precision in Java depends not only on the Java APIs
used by different JGit versions but may also change when running the
same Java code on different VMs. And of course the resolution may
vary among operating and file systems. Moreover, timestamp precision
in the index depends on the program that wrote the index. Canonical
git may use a different resolution, maybe even different between git
versions.
[1] https://www.eclipse.org/forums/index.php/t/1100344/
Change-Id: Idfd08606c883cb98787b2138f9baf0cc89a57b56
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Remove an old work-around for core.autocrlf = input
The removed code was trying to avoid mistakenly reporting differences
when core.autocrlf was set to "input" but a file had already been
committed with CR-LF. It did that by running the blob from the cache
through a CRLF-to-LF filter because older JGit would also run the file
from the working tree through such a filter.
The real fix for this case was done in commit 60cf85a. Since then files
are not normalized if they have already been committed with CR-LF and
this old fix attempt from bug 372834 is no longer needed.
Change-Id: Ib4facc153d81325cb48b4ee956a596b423f36241
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
Fix WorkingTreeIterator.compareMetadata() for CheckStat.MINIMAL
If CheckStat is MINIMAL or timestamps have no nanosecond part
WorkingTreeIterator.compareMetaData only checks the second part of
timestamps and ignores nanoseconds which may have ended up in the index
by using native git.
If
fileLastModified.getEpochSecond() == cacheLastModified.getEpochSecond()
we currently proceed comparing fileLastModified and cacheLastModified
with full precision which is wrong since we determined that we detected
reduced timestamp resolution.
Fix this and also handle smudged index entries for CheckStat.MINIMAL.
Change-Id: I6149885903ac63d79b42d234cc02aa4e19578f3c
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Use Instant instead of milliseconds for filesystem timestamp handling
This enables higher file timestamp resolution on filesystems like ext4,
Mac APFS (1ns) or NTFS (100ns) providing high timestamp resolution on
filesystem level.
Note:
- on some OSes Java 8,9 truncate milliseconds, see
https://bugs.openjdk.java.net/browse/JDK-8177809, fixed in Java 10
- UnixFileAttributes truncates timestamp resolution to microseconds when
converting the internal representation to FileTime exposed in the API,
see https://bugs.openjdk.java.net/browse/JDK-8181493
- WindowsFileAttributes also provides only microsecond resolution
Change-Id: I25ffff31a3c6f725fc345d4ddc2f26da3b88f6f2
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Handle missing "ours" stage in WorkingTreeIterator.hasCrLfInIndex()
In a delete-modify conflict with the deletion as "ours" there may be
no stage 2 in the index. Add appropriate null checks. Add a new test
for this case, and verify that the file gets added with a single LF
after conflict resolution with core.autocrlf=true. This matches the
behavior of canonical git for this case.
Bug: 547724
Change-Id: I1bafdb83d9b78bf85294c78325e818e72fae53bc
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
With text=auto or core.autocrlf=true, git does not normalize upon
check-in if the file in the index contains already CR/LFs. The
documentation says: "When text is set to "auto", the path is
marked for automatic end-of-line conversion. If Git decides that
the content is text, its line endings are converted to LF on
checkin. When the file has been committed with CRLF, no conversion
is done."[1]
Implement the last bit as in canonical git: check the blob in the
index for CR/LFs. For very large files, we check only the first 8000
bytes, like RawText.isBinary() and AutoLFInputStream do.
In Auto(CR)LFInputStream, ensure that the buffer is filled as much as
possible for the isBinary() check.
Regarding these content checks, there are a number of inconsistencies:
* Canonical git considers files containing lone CRs as binary.
* RawText checks the first 8000 bytes.
* Auto(CR)LFInputStream checks the first 8096 (not 8192!) bytes.
None of these are changed with this commit. It appears that canonical
git will check the whole blob, not just the first 8k bytes. Also
note: the check for CR/LF text won't work with LFS (neither in JGit
nor in git) since the blob data is not run through the smudge filter.
C.f. [2].
Two tests in AddCommandTest actually tested that normalization was
done even if the file was already committed with CR/LF.These tests
had to be adapted. I find the git documentation unclear about the
case where core.autocrlf=input, but from [3] it looks as if this
non-normalization also applies in this case.
Add new tests in CommitCommandTest testing this for the case where
the index entry is for a merge conflict. In this case, canonical git
uses the "ours" version.[4] Do the same.
[1] https://git-scm.com/docs/gitattributes
[2] https://github.com/git/git/blob/3434569fc/convert.c#L225
[3] https://github.com/git/git/blob/3434569fc/convert.c#L529
[4] https://github.com/git/git/blob/f2b6aa98b/read-cache.c#L3281
Bug: 470643
Change-Id: Ie7310539fbe6c737d78b1dcc29e34735d4616b88
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
After cloning a repo with a submodule, non-recursively, JGit would
encounter in its TreeWalk in IndexDiff:
* first, a missing gitlink (in index & HEAD, not in working tree)
* second, the untracked folder (not in index and head, in working tree)
As a result, it would report the submodule as missing. Canonical git
reports a clean workspace.
The root cause of this is that the path of a gitlink "x" did
not compare equal to the path of a tree "x" in JGit.
Correct Paths.compare() to account for that. If two paths are otherwise
equal, then let gitlinks match both trees and files. Matching trees
solves the bug. Matching files is necessary to handle the case where
the gitlink directory was replaced by a file; see the new test case
IndexDiffSubmoduleTest.testSubmoduleReplacedByFile(). Comparisons of
unequal paths are left untouched, so the sort order is unchanged.
After the fix, another bug(?) in WorkingTreeIterator became apparent:
with core.dirNoGitLinks = true, it was no longer possible to overwrite
a gitlink in the index. This is now fixed in WorkingTreeIterator.
Add new test cases for the bug itself and for some related cases
(submodule directory deleted or replaced by a file) in
IndexDiffSubmoduleTest. Add a test for missing files in IndexDiffTest,
and adapt the PathsTest to test matching gitlinks.
Bug: 467631
Change-Id: I0549d10d46b1858e5eec3cc15095aa9f1d5f5280
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
Make FileTreeIterator not enter ignored directories by default. We
only need to enter ignored directories if we do some operation against
git, and there is at least one tracked file underneath an ignored
directory.
Walking ignored directories should be avoided as much as possible as
it is a potential performance bottleneck. Some projects have a lot of
files or very deep hierarchies in ignored directories; walking those
may be costly (especially so on Windows). See for instance also bug
500106.
Provide a FileTreeIterator.setWalkIgnoredDirectories() operation to
force the iterator to iterate also through otherwise ignored
directories. Useful for tests (IgnoreNodeTest, CGitIgnoreTest), or
to implement things like "git ls-files --ignored".
Add tests in DirCacheCheckoutTest, and amend IndexDiffTest to test a
little bit more.
Bug: 388582
Change-Id: I6ff584a42c55a07120a4369fd308409431bdb94a
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
Remove it from
* package private functions.
* try blocks
* for loops
this was done with the following python script:
$ cat f.py
import sys
import re
import os
def replaceFinal(m):
return m.group(1) + "(" + m.group(2).replace('final ', '') + ")"
methodDecl = re.compile(r"^([\t ]*[a-zA-Z_ ]+)\(([^)]*)\)")
def subst(fn):
input = open(fn)
os.rename(fn, fn + "~")
dest = open(fn, 'w')
for l in input:
l = methodDecl.sub(replaceFinal, l)
dest.write(l)
dest.close()
for root, dirs, files in os.walk(".", topdown=False):
for f in files:
if not f.endswith('.java'):
continue
full = os.path.join(root, f)
print full
subst(full)
Change-Id: If533a75a417594fc893e7c669d2c1f0f6caeb7ca
Signed-off-by: Han-Wen Nienhuys <hanwen@google.com>
Significantly speed up FileTreeIterator on Windows
Getting attributes of files on Windows is an expensive operation.
Windows stores file attributes in the directory, so they are
basically available "for free" when a directory is listed. The
implementation of Java's Files.walkFileTree() takes advantage of
that (at least in the OpenJDK implementation for Windows) and
provides the attributes from the directory to a FileVisitor.
Using Files.walkFileTree() with a maximum depth of 1 is thus a
good approach on Windows to get both the file names and the
attributes in one go.
In my tests, this gives a significant speed-up of FileTreeIterator
over the "normal" way: using File.listFiles() and then reading the
attributes of each file individually. The speed-up is hard to
quantify exactly, but in my tests I've observed consistently 30-40%
for staging 500 files one after another, each individually, and up
to 50% for individual TreeWalks with a FileTreeIterator.
On Unix, this technique is detrimental. Unix stores file attributes
differently, and getting attributes of individual files is not costly.
On Unix, the old way of doing a listFiles() and getting individual
attributes (both native operations) is about three times faster than
using walkFileTree, which is implemented in Java.
Therefore, move the operation to FS/FS_Win32 and call it from
FileTreeIterator, so that we can have different implementations
depending on the file system.
A little performance test program is included as a JUnit test (to be
run manually).
While this does speed up things on Windows, it doesn't solve the basic
problem of bug 532300: the iterator always gets the full directory
listing and the attributes of all files, and the more files there are
the longer that takes.
Bug: 532300
Change-Id: Ic5facb871c725256c2324b0d97b95e6efc33282a
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
Open auto-closeable resources in try-with-resource
When an auto-closeable resources is not opened in try-with-resource,
the warning "should be managed by try-with-resource" is emitted by
Eclipse.
Fix the ones that can be silenced simply by moving the declaration of
the variable into a try-with-resource.
In cases where we explicitly call the close() method, for example in
tests where we are testing specific behavior caused by the close(),
suppress the warning.
Leave the ones that will require more significant refcactoring to fix.
They can be done in separate commits that can be reviewed and tested
in isolation.
Change-Id: I9682cd20fb15167d3c7f9027cecdc82bc50b83c4
Signed-off-by: David Pursehouse <david.pursehouse@gmail.com>
As it is right now some streams leak out of the filter construct. This
change clarifies responsibilities and fixes stream leaks
Change-Id: Ib9717d43a701a06a502434d64214d13a392de5ab
Signed-off-by: Markus Duft <markus.duft@ssi-schaefer.com>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Processing of negated rules, like !bin/ was not working correctly: they
were interpreted too broad, resulting in unexpected untracked files
which should actually be ignored
Bug: 409664
Change-Id: I0a422fd6607941461bf2175c9105a0311612efa0
Signed-off-by: Marc Strapetz <marc.strapetz@syntevo.com>
This doesn't handle the really hard thing, which is merging spurious
conflicts inside .gitmodules files. That's OK: git.git doesn't
either. Users can resolve the conflict themselves and then commit
the merge.
Previously, jgit would crash when attempting to merge conflicting
submodule changes. Even if there was no conflict, after a merge which
adds submodules, the repository would have been missing empty
directories for newly-added submodules.
This patch fixes the crash, and adds the empty directories where
necessary. It ensures that the index is in a conflicted state when
submodule changes conflict.
Reported-by: Alexey Korobkov
Bug: 494551
Change-Id: I79db6798c2bdcc1159b5b2589b02da198dc906a1
Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twosigma.com>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
TreeWalk: Make getEolStreamType(OperationType) public
and deprecate getEolStreamType().
This resolves a TODO that was apparently supposed to be done in
version 4.4.
Change-Id: I5c9861aedabdc3f99dcf47519b3959a979e6a591
Generate names for objects using only the pure Java SHA1
implementation, but continue using MessageDigest in tests.
This opens the possibility of changing the hashing function
to incorporate additional safety measures, such as those
used in sha1dc[1].
Since MessageDigest has higher throughput, continue using
MessageDigest for computing pack, idx and DirCache trailers.
These are less likely to be sensitive to SHAttered[2] types
of attacks, as Git uses them to detect random bit flips
during transfer, and not for content identity.
[1] https://github.com/cr-marcstevens/sha1collisiondetection
[2] https://shattered.it/
Change-Id: If6da98334201f7f20cb916e46f782c45f373784e
Enable and fix warnings about redundant specification of type arguments
Since the introduction of generic type parameter inference in Java 7,
it's not necessary to explicitly specify the type of generic parameters.
Enable the warning in Eclipse, and fix all occurrences.
Change-Id: I9158caf1beca5e4980b6240ac401f3868520aad0
Signed-off-by: David Pursehouse <david.pursehouse@gmail.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>
Fix symlink content comparison on MacOS in tree walk
Symlinks on MacOS are written as UTF-8 NFD, but
readSymbolicLink().toString() converts to NFC with potentially fewer
bytes. May occur in particular if the link target has non-ASCII
characters for which the NFC and NFD encodings differ. This may lead
to an EOFException: Short read of block.
This causes all kinds of weird effects in EGit, ranging from failing
rebases (which report the exception to the user) to EGit decorations in
the navigator silently disappearing (and never coming back).
* Rename readContentAsNormalizedString() to readSymlinkTarget() as it's
called only for symlinks. Also make it protected.
* Fix by allowing the read to succeed even if less than the expected
number of bytes are returned by the entry's input stream.
* Override in FileTreeIterator to use fs.readSymlink() directly.
Includes a new MacOS-only test.
Change-Id: I264c5972d67b1cbb1ed690580f5706e671b9affd
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Adds a JGit built-in implementation of the "git lfs smudge" filter. This
filter should do the same as the one described in [1] besides that it
only supports the local case when the lfs objects are already present in
the media directory. Remote cases where download of LFS objects from an
LFS server is needed will be done in a later commit.
[1] https://github.com/github/git-lfs/blob/master/docs/man/git-lfs-smudge.1.ronn
Change-Id: I8ff661d4edd3667ef7f86f3b4fa33e568eb4c8f4
JGit supports clean filters defined in repository configuration. The
filters are implemented as external programs filtering content by
accepting the original content (as seen in the working tree) on stdin
and which emit the filtered content on stdout. To run such a filter JGit
has to start an external process and pump data into/from this process.
This commit adds support for clean filters which are implemented
in Java and which are executed by jgit's main thread. When a filter is
defined in the configuration as
"jgit://builtin/<filterDriverName>/clean" then JGit will lookup in a
static map whether a filter is registered under this name. If found
such a filter is called to do the filtering.
The functionality in this commit requires that a program using JGit
explicitly calls the JGit API to register built-in implementations for
specific clean filters. In follow-up commits configuration parameters
will be added which trigger such registrations. Other commits will add
implementations for lfs filters.
Change-Id: I0344d3c54801c9a46e5a606c5df17e5f2e17b2be
Don't check lastModified, length on folders for submodules
The metadata comparison of submodules is not reliable because of the
last modified timestamp and directory length.
Bug: 498759
Change-Id: If5db69ef3868e475ac477d3e8a7750b268799b0c
Fix computation of id in WorkingTreeIterator with autocrlf and smudging
JGit failed to do checkouts when the index contained smudged entries and
autocrlf was on. In such cases the WorkingTreeIterator calculated the
SHA1 sometimes on content which was not correctly filtered. The SHA1 was
computed on content which two times went through a lf->crlf conversion.
We used to tell the treewalk whether it is a checkin or checkout
operation and always use the related filters when reading any content.
If on windows and autocrlf is true and we do a checkout operation then
we always used a lf->crlf conversion on any text content. That's not
correct. Even during a checkout we sometimes need the crlf->lf
conversion. E.g. when calculating the content-id for working-tree
content we need to use crlf->lf filtering although the overall operation
type is checkout.
Often this bug does not have effects because we seldom compute the
content-id of filesystem content during a checkout. But we do need to
know whether a file is dirty or not before we overwrite it during a
checkout. And if the index entries are smudged we don't trust the index
and compute filesystem-content-sha1's explicitly.
This caused EGit not to be able to switch branches anymore on Windows
when autocrlf was true. EGit denied the checkout because it thought
workingtree files are dirty because content-sha1 are computed on wrongly
filtered content.
Bug: 493360
Change-Id: I1072a57b4c529ba3aaa50b7b02d2b816bb64a9b8
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Implement the DIR_NO_GITLINKS setting with the same functionality
it provides in cGit.
Bug: 436200
Change-Id: I8304e42df2d7e8d7925f515805e075a92ff6ce28
Signed-off-by: Preben Ingvaldsen <preben@puppetlabs.com>
TreeWalk provides the new method getEolStreamType. This new method can
be used with EolStreamTypeUtil in order to create a wrapped InputStream
or OutputStream when reading / writing files. The implementation
implements support for the git configuration options core.crlf, core.eol
and the .gitattributes "text", "eol" and "binary"
CQ: 10896
Bug: 486563
Change-Id: Ie4f6367afc2a6aec1de56faf95120fff0339a358
Signed-off-by: Ivan Motsch <ivan.motsch@bsiag.com>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Paths.pathCompare: Utility to sort paths from byte[]
Consolidate copies of this function into one location.
Add some unit tests to prevent bugs that were accidentally
introduced while trying to make this refactoring.
Change-Id: I82f64bbb8601ca2d8316ca57ae8119df32bb5c08
When filters are defined for certain paths in gitattributes make
sure that clean filters are processed when adding new content to the
object database.
Change-Id: Iffd72914cec5b434ba4d0de232e285b7492db868
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Add an attribute accessor to CanonicalTreeParser and use it in Treewalk
When checking out a branch we need to access the attributes stored
in the tree to be checked out. E.g. directly after a clone we checkout
the remote HEAD. In this case index and workingtree are still empty.
So we have to search the tree to be checked out for attributes.
Change-Id: I6d96f5d095ed2e3c259d4b12124e404f5215bd9f
Adds the git attributes computation on the treewalk
Adds the getAttributes feature to the tree walk. The computation of
attributes needs to be done by the TreeWalk since it needs both a
WorkingTreeIterator and a DirCacheIterator.
Bug: 342372
CQ: 9120
Change-Id: I5e33257fd8c9895869a128bad3fd1e720409d361
Signed-off-by: Arthur Daussy <arthur.daussy@obeo.fr>
Signed-off-by: Christian Halstrick <christian.halstrick@sap.com>
Consider original file mode while checking parent ignore rules
The WorkingTreeIterator.isEntryIgnored() should use originally requested
file mode while descending to the file tree root and checking ignore
rules. Original code asking isEntryIgnored() on a file was using
directory mode instead if the .gitignore was not located in the same
directory.
Bug: 473506
Change-Id: I9f16ba714c3ea9e6585e9c11623270dbdf4fb1df
Signed-off-by: Andrey Loskutov <loskutov@gmx.de>