This is similar to change Idbc2c29bd that skipped detecting content
renames for large files. With this change, we added a new option in
RenameDetector called "skipContentRenamesForBinaryFiles", that when set,
causes binary files with any slight modification to be identified as
added/deleted. The default for this boolean is false, so preserving
current behaviour.
Change-Id: I4770b1f69c60b1037025ddd0940ba86df6047299
RepoCommand: Do not set 'branch' if the revision is a tag
The "branch" field in the .gitmodules is the signal for gerrit to keep
the superproject autoupdated. Tags are immutable and there is no need to
track them, plus the cgit client requires the field to be a "remote
branch name" but not a tag.
Do not set the "branch" field if the revision is a tag. Keep those tags
in another field ("ref") as they help other tools to find the commit in
the destination repository.
We can still have false negatives when a refname is not fully qualified,
but this check covers e.g. the most common case in android.
Note that the javadoc of #setRecordRemoteBranch already mentions that
"submodules that request a tag will not have branch name recorded".
Change-Id: Ib1c321a4d3b7f8d51ca2ea204f72dc0cfed50c37
Signed-off-by: Ivan Frade <ifrade@google.com>
Check the last line of the last hunk of a file, not the last line of
the whole patch.
Note that C git only checks that this line starts with "\ " and is at
least 12 characters long because of possible different texts when non-
English messages are used.
Change-Id: I0db81699eb3e99ed7b536a3e2b8dc97df1f58a89
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
ApplyCommand: handle completely empty context lines in text patches
C git treats completely empty lines as empty context lines (which
traditionally have a single blank). Apparently newer GNU diff may
produce such lines; see [1]. ("Newer" meaning "since 2006"...)
[1] https://github.com/git/git/commit/b507b465f7831
Change-Id: I80c1f030edb17a46289b1dabf11a2648d2660d38
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
ApplyCommand: use byte arrays for text patches, not strings
Instead of converting the patch bytes to strings apply the patch on
byte level, like C git does. Converting the input lines and the hunk
lines from bytes to strings and then applying the patch based on
strings may give surprising results if a patch converts a text file
from one encoding to another. Moreover, in the end we don't know which
encoding to use to write the result.
Previous code just wrote the result as UTF-8, which forcibly changed
the encoding if the original input had some other encoding (even if the
patch had the same non-UTF-8 encoding). It was also wrong if the input
was UTF-8, and the patch should have changed the encoding to something
else.
So use ByteBuffers instead of Strings. This has the additional advantage
that all these ByteBuffers can share the underlying byte arrays of the
input and of the patch, so it also reduces memory consumption.
Change-Id: I450975f2ba0e7d0bec8973e3113cc2e7aea187ee
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
Implement applying binary patches. Handles both literal and delta
patches. Note that C git also runs binary files through the clean
and smudge filters. Implement the same safeguards against corrupted
patches as in C git: require the full OIDs to be present in the patch
file, and apply a binary patch only if both pre- and post-image hashes
match.
Add tests for applying literal and delta patches.
Bug: 371725
Change-Id: I71dc214fe4145d7cc8e4769384fb78c7d0d6c220
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
Add a new BinaryDeltaInputStream that applies a delta provided by
another InputStream to a given base. Because delta application needs
random access to the base, the base itself cannot be yet another
InputStream. But at least this enables streaming of the result.
Add a simple test using delta hunks generated by C git.
Bug: 371725
Change-Id: Ibd26fa2f49860737ad5c5387f7f4870d3e85e628
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
ApplyCommand: add streams to read/write binary patch hunks
Add streams that can encode or decode git binary patch data on the fly.
Git writes binary patches base-85 encoded, at most 52 un-encoded bytes,
with the unencoded data length prefixed in a one-character encoding, and
suffixed with a newline character.
Add a test for both the new input and the output stream. The test
roundtrips binary data of different lengths in different ways.
Bug: 371725
Change-Id: Ic3faebaa4637520f5448b3d1acd78d5aaab3907a
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
Add an implementation for base-85 encoding and decoding [1]. Git binary
patches use this format.
Base-85 encoding assembles bytes as 32-bit MSB values, then converts
these values to base-85 numbers (always 5 bytes) encoded as printable
ASCII characters. Decoding base-85 is the reverse operation. Note
that decoding may overflow on invalid input as 85^5 > 2^32. Encodings
always have a length that is a multiple of 5. If input length is not
divisible by 4, padding bytes are (logically) added, which are ignored
when decoding. The encoding for n bytes has thus always exactly length
(n + 3) / 4 * 5 in integer arithmetic (truncating division).
Includes tests.
[1] https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc1924
Bug: 371725
Change-Id: Ib5b9a503cd62cf70e080a4fb38c8cd1eeeaebcfe
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
ApplyCommand: convert to git internal format before applying patch
Applying a patch on Windows failed if the patch had the (normal)
single-LF line endings, but the file on disk had the usual Windows
CR-LF line endings.
Git (and JGit) compute diffs on the git-internal blob, i.e., after
CR-LF transformation and clean filtering. Applying patches to files
directly is thus incorrect and may fail if CR-LF settings don't
match, or if clean/smudge filtering is involved.
Change ApplyCommand to run the file content through the check-in
filters before applying the patch, and run the result through the
check-out filters. This makes patch application succeed even if the
patch has single-LFs, but the file has CR-LF and core.autocrlf is
true.
Add tests for various combinations of line endings in the file and in
the patch, and a test to verify the clean/smudge handling.
See also [1].
Running the file though clean/smudge may give strange results with
LFS-managed files. JGit's DiffFormatter has some extra code and
applies the smudge filter again after having run the file through
the check-in filters (CR-LF and clean). So JGit can actually produce
a diff on LFS-managed files using the normal diff machinery. (If it
doesn't run out of memory, that is. After all, LFS is intended for
_large_ files.) How such a diff would be applied with either C git
or JGit is entirely unclear; neither has any code for this special
case. Compare also [2].
Note that C git just doesn't know about LFS and always diffs after
the check-in filter chain, so for LFS files, it'll produce a diff
of the LFS pointers.
[1] https://github.com/git/git/commit/c24f3abac
[2] https://github.com/git-lfs/git-lfs/issues/440
Bug: 571585
Change-Id: I8f71ff26313b5773ff1da612b0938ad2f18751f5
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
Don't create the stream eagerly in lock(); that may cause JGit to
exceed OS or JVM limits on open file descriptors if many locks need
to be created, for instance when creating many refs. Instead create
the output stream only when one really needs to write something.
Bug: 573328
Change-Id: If9441ed40494d46f594a896d34a5c4f56f91ebf4
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
Don't create the stream eagerly in lock(); that may cause JGit to
exceed OS or JVM limits on open file descriptors if many locks need
to be created, for instance when creating many refs. Instead create
the output stream only when one really needs to write something.
Bug: 573328
Change-Id: If9441ed40494d46f594a896d34a5c4f56f91ebf4
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
Git has different conflict resolution strategies:
* There is a tree merge strategy "ours" which just ignores any changes
from theirs ("-s ours"). JGit also has the mirror strategy "theirs"
ignoring any changes from "ours". (This doesn't exist in C git.)
Adapt StashApplyCommand and CherrypickCommand to be able to use those
tree merge strategies.
* For the resolve/recursive tree merge strategies, there are content
conflict resolution strategies "ours" and "theirs", which resolve
any conflict hunks by taking the "ours" or "theirs" hunk. In C git
those correspond to "-Xours" or -Xtheirs". Implement that in
MergeAlgorithm, and add API to set and pass through such a strategy
for resolving content conflicts.
* The "ours/theirs" content conflict resolution strategies also apply
for binary files. Handle these cases in ResolveMerger.
Note that the content conflict resolution strategies ("-X ours/theirs")
do _not_ apply to modify/delete or delete/modify conflicts. Such
conflicts are always reported as conflicts by C git. They do apply,
however, if one side completely clears a file's content.
Bug: 501111
Change-Id: I2c9c170c61c440a2ab9c387991e7a0c3ab960e07
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Allow file mode conflicts in virtual base commit on recursive merge.
Similar to https://git.eclipse.org/r/c/jgit/jgit/+/175166, ignore
path that have conflicts on attributes, so that the virtual base could
be used by RecursiveMerger.
Change-Id: I99c95445a305558d55bbb9c9e97446caaf61c154
Signed-off-by: Marija Savtchouk <mariasavtchouk@google.com>
In cases where we need to determine if a given commit is merged
into many refs, using isMergedInto(base, tip) for each ref would
cause multiple unwanted walks.
getMergedInto() marks the unreachable commits as uninteresting
which would then avoid walking that same path again.
Using the same api, also introduce isMergedIntoAny() and
isMergedIntoAll()
Change-Id: I65de9873dce67af9c415d1d236bf52d31b67e8fe
Signed-off-by: Adithya Chakilam <quic_achakila@quicinc.com>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
There are two code paths for detecting renames: one on tree diffs
(using DiffFormatter#scan) and the other on single file diffs (using
DiffFormatter#format). The latter skips binary and large files
for rename detection - check [1], but the former doesn't.
This change skips content rename detection for the tree diffs case for
large files. This is essential to avoid expensive computations while
reading the file, especially for callers who don't want to pay that
cost. Content renames are those which involve files with slightly
modified content. Exact renames will still be identified.
The default threshold for file sizes is reused from
PackConfig.DEFAULT_BIG_FILE_THRESHOLD: 50 MB.
[1] 232876421d/org.eclipse.jgit/src/org/eclipse/jgit/diff/RawText.java (386)
Change-Id: Idbc2c29bd381c6e387185204638f76fda47df41e
Signed-off-by: Youssef Elghareeb <ghareeb@google.com>
Add new constructors to PackFile to improve a common use case where
callers know the directory, id, and extension, but previously needed to
construct a valid file name (with prefix, '.', etc) to create a
PackFile. Most callers can use the variant that has id as an ObjectId,
but provide an id as String variant too.
Change-Id: I39e4466abe8c9509f5916d5bfe675066570b8585
Signed-off-by: Nasser Grainawi <quic_nasserg@quicinc.com>
Restore preserved packs during missing object seeks
Provide a recovery path for objects being referenced during the pack
pruning race. Due to the pack pruning race, it is possible for objects
to become referenced after a pack has been deemed safe to prune, but
before it actually gets pruned. If this happened previously, the newly
referenced objects would be missing and potentially result in a
corrupted ref.
Add the ability to recover from this situation when an object is missing
but happens to still be available in a pack in the "preserved"
directory. This is likely only useful when used in conjunction with the
--preserve-old-packs GC option, which prunes packs by hard-linking to
the preserved directory. If an object is missing and found in a pack in
the preserved directory, immediately recover that pack and its
associated files (idx, bitmaps...) by moving them back to the original
pack directory, and then retry the operation that would have failed due
to the missing object. This retry can now succeed and the repository
may avoid corruption. This approach should drastically reduce the
chance of a corrupt repository during pack pruning at very little extra
cost. This extra cost should only be incurred when objects are missing
and a failure would normally occur.
Change-Id: I2a704e3276b88cc892159d9bfe2455c6eec64252
Signed-off-by: Martin Fick <quic_mfick@quicinc.com>
Signed-off-by: Nasser Grainawi <quic_nasserg@quicinc.com>
Pack: Replace extensions bitset with bitmapIdx PackFile
The only extension that was ever consulted from the bitmap was the
bitmap index. We can simplify the Pack code as well as the code of
all the callers if we focus on just that usage.
Change-Id: I799ddfdee93142af67ce5081d14a430d36aa4c15
Signed-off-by: Nasser Grainawi <quic_nasserg@quicinc.com>
The PackFile class is intended to be a central place to do all
common pack filename manipulation and parsing to help reduce repeated
code and bugs. Use the PackFile class in the Pack class and in many
tests to ensure it works well in a variety of situations. Later changes
will expand use of PackFiles to even more areas.
Change-Id: I921b30f865759162bae46ddd2c6d669de06add4a
Signed-off-by: Nasser Grainawi <quic_nasserg@quicinc.com>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
A cookie file stores the expiration in seconds since the Linux Epoch,
not in milliseconds. Correct reading and writing cookie files; with
a backwards-compatibility hack to read files that contain a millisecond
timestamp.
Add a test, and fix tests not to rely on the actual current time so
that they will also run successfully after 2030-01-01 noon.
Bug: 571574
Change-Id: If3ba68391e574520701cdee119544eedc42a1ff2
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
init: add config option to set default for the initial branch name
We introduced the option --initial-branch=<branch-name> to allow
initializing a new repository with a different initial branch.
To allow users to override the initial branch name more permanently
(i.e. without having to specify the name manually for each 'git init'),
introduce the 'init.defaultBranch' option.
This option was added to git in 2.28.0.
See https://git-scm.com/docs/git-config#Documentation/git-config.txt-initdefaultBranch
Bug: 564794
Change-Id: I679b14057a54cd3d19e44460c4a5bd3a368ec848
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
init: allow specifying the initial branch name for the new repository
Add option --initial-branch/-b to InitCommand and the CLI init command.
This is the first step to implement support for the new option
init.defaultBranch. Both were added to git in release 2.28.
See https://git-scm.com/docs/git-init#Documentation/git-init.txt--bltbranch-namegt
Bug: 564794
Change-Id: Ia383b3f90b5549db80f99b2310450a7faf6bce4c
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Pack better represents the purpose of the object and paves the way to
add a PackFile object that extends File.
Change-Id: I39b4f697902d395e9b6df5e8ce53078ce72fcea3
Signed-off-by: Nasser Grainawi <quic_nasserg@quicinc.com>
Allow dir/file conflicts in virtual base commit on recursive merge.
If RecursiveMerger finds multiple base commits, it tries to compute
the virtual ancestor to use as a base for the three way merge.
Currently, the content conflicts between ancestors are ignored (file
staged with the conflict markers). If the path is a file in one ancestor
and a dir in the other, it results in NoMergeBaseException
(CONFLICTS_DURING_MERGE_BASE_CALCULATION).
Allow these conflicts by ignoring this unmerged path in the virtual
base. The merger will compute diff in the children instead and it
can be further fixed manually if needed.
Change-Id: Id59648ae1d6bdf300b26fff513c3204317b755ab
Signed-off-by: Marija Savtchouk <mariasavtchouk@google.com>
Fix DateRevQueue tie breaks with more than 2 elements
DateRevQueue is expected to give out the commits that have higher
commit time. But in case of tie(same commit time), it should give
the commit that is inserted first. This is inferred from the
testInsertTie test case written for DateRevQueue. Also that test
case, right now uses just two commits which caused it not to fail
with the current implementation, so added another commit to make
the test more robust.
By fixing the DateRevQueue, we would also match the behaviour of
LogCommand.addRange(c1,c2) with git log c1..c2. A test case for
the same is added to show that current behaviour is not the
expected one.
By fixing addRange(), the order in which commits are applied during
a rebase is altered. Rebase logic should have never depended upon
LogCommand.addRange() since the intended order of addRange() is not
the order a rebase should use. So, modify the RebaseCommand to use
RevWalk directly with TopoNonIntermixSortGenerator.
Add a new LogCommandTest.addRangeWithMerge() test case which creates
commits in the following order:
A - B - C - M
\ /
-D-
Using git 2.30.0, git log B..M outputs: M C D
LogCommand.addRange(B, M) without this fix outputs: M D C
LogCommand.addRange(B, M) with this fix outputs: M C D
Change-Id: I30cc3ba6c97f0960f64e9e021df96ff276f63db7
Signed-off-by: Adithya Chakilam <achakila@codeaurora.org>
This would run into an endless loop if the offset given was not zero.
Fix the logic to exit the read loop when the buffer is full.
Luckily all existing uses of this method call it only with offset zero.
Change-Id: I0ec2a4fb43efe4a605d06ac2e88cf155d50e2f1e
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>