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>
Each time getConfig() is called on FileRepository, it checks the
last modified time of both ~/.gitconfig and $GIT_DIR?config. If
$GIT_DIR/config appears to have been modified, it is read back in
from disk and the current config is wiped out.
When mutating a configuration file, this may cause in-memory edits
to disappear. To avoid that callers need to avoid calling getConfig
until after the configuration has been saved to disk.
Unfortunately the API is still horribly broken. Configuration should
be modified only while a lock is held on the configuration file, very
similar to the way a ref is updated via its locking protocol. But our
existing API is really broken for that so we'll have to defer cleaning
up the edit path for a future change.
Change-Id: I5888dd97bac20ddf60456c81ffc1eb8df04ef410
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Introduce a http test bundle to make this functionality available for
EGit tests. A simple http server class is provided. The jetty version
was updated to a version that is also available via p2 (needed in EGit
UI tests).
Change-Id: I13bfc4c6c47e27d8f97d3e9752347d6d23e553d4
Signed-off-by: Jens Baumgart <jens.baumgart@sap.com>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Some strings were not externalized. Also use them in HTTP tests to
ensure that they will also succeed when message bundles are
translated.
Change-Id: Id02717176557e7d57e676e1339cd89f2be88d330
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Since 858b2c92 we have a HTTP authentication implementation hence
we now get different exception messages when required authentication
headers are not available. This broke the HTTP tests.
Change-Id: Ie08c1ec37e497c2a6f70a75f7c59f0805812a5cc
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Move FileRepository to storage.file.FileRepository
This move isolates all of the local file specific implementation code
into a single package, where their package-private methods and support
classes are properly hidden away from the rest of the core library.
Because of the sheer number of files impacted, I have limited this
change to only the renames and the updated imports.
Change-Id: Icca4884e1a418f83f8b617d0c4c78b73d8a4bd17
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Use FileRepository where we assume other file semantics
When the surrounding code is already heavily based upon the
assumption that we have a FileRepository (e.g. because it
created that type of repository) keep the type around and
use it directly. This permits us to continue to do things
like save the configuration file.
Change-Id: Ib783f0f6a11acd6aa305c16d61ccc368b46beecc
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Remove RepositoryConfig and use FileBasedConfig instead
Change the Repository API to use straight-up FileBasedConfig.
This lets us remove the subclass RepositoryConfig and stop having
a specialized configuration type for repository, letting us instead
focus the config type heirarchy on type-of-storage rather than use.
Change-Id: I7236800e8090624453a89cb0c7a9a632702691c6
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
http.server: Use TemporaryBuffer and compress some responses
The HTTP server side code now uses the same approach that the smart
HTTP client code uses when preparing a request body. The payload
is streamed into a TemporaryBuffer of limited size. If the entire
data fits, its compressed with gzip if the user agent supports that,
and a Content-Length header is used to transmit the fixed length
body to the peer. If however the data overflows the limited memory
segment, its streamed uncompressed to the peer.
One might initially think that larger contents which overflow
the buffer should also be compressed, rather than sent raw, since
they were deemed "large". But usually these larger contents are
actually a pack file which has been already heavily compressed by
Git specific routines. Trying to deflate that with gzip is probably
going to take up more space, not less, so the compression overhead
isn't worthwhile.
This buffer and compress optimization helps repositories with a
large number of references, as their text based advertisements
compress well. For example jgit's own native repository currently
requires 32,628 bytes for its full advertisement of 489 references.
Most repositories have fewer references, and thus could compress
their entire response in one buffer.
Change-Id: I790609c9f763339e0a1db9172aa570e29af96f42
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
No Eclipse support for this project is provided, because the
Jetty project does not publish a complete P2 repository.
Change-Id: Ic5fe2e79bb216e36920fd4a70ec15dd6ccfd1468
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>