Rebase shears/seen: 1 conflict(s) (0 skipped, 1 resolved) (#29360922711)#304
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gitforwindowshelper[bot] wants to merge 332 commits into
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Rebase shears/seen: 1 conflict(s) (0 skipped, 1 resolved) (#29360922711)#304gitforwindowshelper[bot] wants to merge 332 commits into
gitforwindowshelper[bot] wants to merge 332 commits into
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Since we are already walking our reachable objects using the path-walk API,
let's now collect lists of the paths that contribute most to different
metrics. Specifically, we care about
* Number of versions.
* Total size on disk.
* Total inflated size (no delta or zlib compression).
This information can be critical to discovering which parts of the
repository are causing the most growth, especially on-disk size. Different
packing strategies might help compress data more efficiently, but the toal
inflated size is a representation of the raw size of all snapshots of those
paths. Even when stored efficiently on disk, that size represents how much
information must be processed to complete a command such as 'git blame'.
The exact disk size seems to be not quite robust enough for testing, as
could be seen by the `linux-musl-meson` job consistently failing, possibly
because of zlib-ng deflates differently: t8100.4(git survey
(default)) was failing with a symptom like this:
TOTAL OBJECT SIZES BY TYPE
===============================================
Object Type | Count | Disk Size | Inflated Size
------------+-------+-----------+--------------
- Commits | 10 | 1523 | 2153
+ Commits | 10 | 1528 | 2153
Trees | 10 | 495 | 1706
Blobs | 10 | 191 | 101
- Tags | 4 | 510 | 528
+ Tags | 4 | 547 | 528
This means: the disk size is unlikely something we can verify robustly.
Since zlib-ng seems to increase the disk size of the tags from 528 to
547, we cannot even assume that the disk size is always smaller than the
inflated size. We will most likely want to either skip verifying the
disk size altogether, or go for some kind of fuzzy matching, say, by
replacing `s/ 1[45][0-9][0-9] / ~1.5k /` and `s/ [45][0-9][0-9] / ~½k /`
or something like that.
Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
This comment has been true for the longest time; The combination of the two preceding commits made it incorrect, so let's drop that comment. Signed-off-by: Matthias Aßhauer <mha1993@live.de> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
NTLM authentication is relatively weak. This is the case even with the
default setting of modern Windows versions, where NTLMv1 and LanManager
are disabled and only NTLMv2 is enabled: NTLMv2 hashes of even
reasonably complex 8-character passwords can be broken in a matter of
days, given enough compute resources.
Even worse: On Windows, NTLM authentication uses Security Support
Provider Interface ("SSPI"), which provides the credentials without
requiring the user to type them in.
Which means that an attacker could talk an unsuspecting user into
cloning from a server that is under the attacker's control and extracts
the user's NTLMv2 hash without their knowledge.
For that reason, let's disallow NTLM authentication by default.
NTLM authentication is quite simple to set up, though, and therefore
there are still some on-prem Azure DevOps setups out there whose users
and/or automation rely on this type of authentication. To give them an
escape hatch, introduce the `http.<url>.allowNTLMAuth` config setting
that can be set to `true` to opt back into using NTLM for a specific
remote repository.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Special-casing even more configurations simply does not make sense. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Git for Windows wants to add `git.exe` to the users' `PATH`, without cluttering the latter with unnecessary executables such as `wish.exe`. To that end, it invented the concept of its "Git wrapper", i.e. a tiny executable located in `C:\Program Files\Git\cmd\git.exe` (originally a CMD script) whose sole purpose is to set up a couple of environment variables and then spawn the _actual_ `git.exe` (which nowadays lives in `C:\Program Files\Git\mingw64\bin\git.exe` for 64-bit, and the obvious equivalent for 32-bit installations). Currently, the following environment variables are set unless already initialized: - `MSYSTEM`, to make sure that the MSYS2 Bash and the MSYS2 Perl interpreter behave as expected, and - `PLINK_PROTOCOL`, to force PuTTY's `plink.exe` to use the SSH protocol instead of Telnet, - `PATH`, to make sure that the `bin` folder in the user's home directory, as well as the `/mingw64/bin` and the `/usr/bin` directories are included. The trick here is that the `/mingw64/bin/` and `/usr/bin/` directories are relative to the top-level installation directory of Git for Windows (which the included Bash interprets as `/`, i.e. as the MSYS pseudo root directory). Using the absence of `MSYSTEM` as a tell-tale, we can detect in `git.exe` whether these environment variables have been initialized properly. Therefore we can call `C:\Program Files\Git\mingw64\bin\git` in-place after this change, without having to call Git through the Git wrapper. Obviously, above-mentioned directories must be _prepended_ to the `PATH` variable, otherwise we risk picking up executables from unrelated Git installations. We do that by constructing the new `PATH` value from scratch, appending `$HOME/bin` (if `HOME` is set), then the MSYS2 system directories, and then appending the original `PATH`. Side note: this modification of the `PATH` variable is independent of the modification necessary to reach the executables and scripts in `/mingw64/libexec/git-core/`, i.e. the `GIT_EXEC_PATH`. That modification is still performed by Git, elsewhere, long after making the changes described above. While we _still_ cannot simply hard-link `mingw64\bin\git.exe` to `cmd` (because the former depends on a couple of `.dll` files that are only in `mingw64\bin`, i.e. calling `...\cmd\git.exe` would fail to load due to missing dependencies), at least we can now avoid that extra process of running the Git wrapper (which then has to wait for the spawned `git.exe` to finish) by calling `...\mingw64\bin\git.exe` directly, via its absolute path. Testing this is in Git's test suite tricky: we set up a "new" MSYS pseudo-root and copy the `git.exe` file into the appropriate location, then verify that `MSYSTEM` is set properly, and also that the `PATH` is modified so that scripts can be found in `$HOME/bin`, `/mingw64/bin/` and `/usr/bin/`. This addresses git-for-windows#2283 Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Move the default `-ENTRY` and `-SUBSYSTEM` arguments for MSVC=1 builds from `config.mak.uname` into `clink.pl`. These args are constant for console-mode executables. Add support to `clink.pl` for generating a Win32 GUI application using the `-mwindows` argument (to match how GCC does it). This changes the `-ENTRY` and `-SUBSYSTEM` arguments accordingly. Signed-off-by: Jeff Hostetler <jeffhost@microsoft.com>
The previous commits introduced a compile-time option to load libcurl lazily, but it uses the hard-coded name "libcurl-4.dll" (or equivalent on platforms other than Windows). To allow for installing multiple libcurl flavors side by side, where each supports one specific SSL/TLS backend, let's first look whether `libcurl-<backend>-4.dll` exists, and only use `libcurl-4.dll` as a fall back. That will allow us to ship with a libcurl by default that only supports the Secure Channel backend for the `https://` protocol. This libcurl won't suffer from any dependency problem when upgrading OpenSSL to a new major version (which will change the DLL name, and hence break every program and library that depends on it). This is crucial because Git for Windows relies on libcurl to keep working when building and deploying a new OpenSSL package because that library is used by `git fetch` and `git clone`. Note that this feature is by no means specific to Windows. On Ubuntu, for example, a `git` built using `LAZY_LOAD_LIBCURL` will use `libcurl.so.4` for `http.sslbackend=openssl` and `libcurl-gnutls.so.4` for `http.sslbackend=gnutls`. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
The 'git survey' builtin provides several detail tables, such as "top files by on-disk size". The size of these tables defaults to 10, currently. Allow the user to specify this number via a new --top=<N> option or the new survey.top config key. Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Commit 2406bf5 (Win32: detect unix socket support at runtime, 2024-04-03) introduced a runtime detection for whether the operating system supports unix sockets for Windows, but a mistake snuck into the tests. When building and testing Git without NO_UNIX_SOCKETS we currently skip t0301-credential-cache on Windows if unix sockets are supported and run the tests if they aren't. Flip that logic to actually work the way it was intended. Signed-off-by: Matthias Aßhauer <mha1993@live.de> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
The new default of Git is to disable NTLM authentication by default. To help users find the escape hatch of that config setting, should they need it, suggest it when the authentication failed and the server had offered NTLM, i.e. if re-enabling it would fix the problem. Helped-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
In 436a422 (max_tree_depth: lower it for clangarm64 on Windows, 2025-04-23), I provided a work-around for a nasty issue with clangarm builds, where the stack is exhausted before the maximal tree depth is reached, and the resulting error cannot easily be handled by Git (because it would require Windows-specific handling). Turns out that this is not at all limited to ARM64. In my tests with CLANG64 in MSYS2 on the GitHub Actions runners, the test t6700.4 failed in the exact same way. What's worse: The limit needs to be quite a bit lower for x86_64 than for aarch64. In aforementioned tests, the breaking point was 1232: With 1231 it still worked as expected, with 1232 it would fail with the `STATUS_STACK_OVERFLOW` incorrectly mapped to exit code 127. For comparison, in my tests on GitHub Actions' Windows/ARM64 runners, the breaking point was 1439 instead. Therefore the condition needs to be adapted once more, to accommodate (with some safety margin) both aarch64 and x86_64 in clang-based builds on Windows, to let that test pass. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
…ctory Internally, Git expects the environment variable `HOME` to be set, and to point to the current user's home directory. This environment variable is not set by default on Windows, and therefore Git tries its best to construct one if it finds `HOME` unset. There are actually two different approaches Git tries: first, it looks at `HOMEDRIVE`/`HOMEPATH` because this is widely used in corporate environments with roaming profiles, and a user generally wants their global Git settings to be in a roaming profile. Only when `HOMEDRIVE`/`HOMEPATH` is either unset or does not point to a valid location, Git will fall back to using `USERPROFILE` instead. However, starting with Windows Vista, for secondary logons and services, the environment variables `HOMEDRIVE`/`HOMEPATH` point to Windows' system directory (usually `C:\Windows\system32`). That is undesirable, and that location is usually write-protected anyway. So let's verify that the `HOMEDRIVE`/`HOMEPATH` combo does not point to Windows' system directory before using it, falling back to `USERPROFILE` if it does. This fixes git-for-windows#2709 Initial-Path-by: Ivan Pozdeev <vano@mail.mipt.ru> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
headless-git is a git executable without opening a console window. It is useful when other GUI executables want to call git. We should install it together with git on Windows. Signed-off-by: Yuyi Wang <Strawberry_Str@hotmail.com>
winuser.h contains the definition of RT_MANIFEST that our LLVM based toolchain needs to understand that we want to embed compat/win32/git.manifest as an application manifest. It currently just embeds it as additional data that Windows doesn't understand. This also helps our GCC based toolchain understand that we only want one copy embedded. It currently embeds one working assembly manifest and one nearly identical, but useless copy as additional data. This also teaches our Visual Studio based buildsystems to pick up the manifest file from git.rc. This means we don't have to explicitly specify it in contrib/buildsystems/Generators/Vcxproj.pm anymore. Slightly counter-intuitively this also means we have to explicitly tell Cmake not to embed a default manifest. This fixes git-for-windows#4707 Signed-off-by: Matthias Aßhauer <mha1993@live.de> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
This will help with Git for Windows' maintenance going forward: It allows Git for Windows to switch its primary libcurl to a variant without the OpenSSL backend, while still loading an alternate when setting `http.sslBackend = openssl`. This is necessary to avoid maintenance headaches with upgrading OpenSSL: its major version name is encoded in the shared library's file name and hence major version updates (temporarily) break libraries that are linked against the OpenSSL library. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
In Git for Windows v2.39.0, we fixed a regression where `git.exe` would no longer work in Windows Nano Server (frequently used in Docker containers). This GitHub workflow can be used to verify manually that the Git/Scalar executables work in Nano Server. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
When running Git for Windows on a remote APFS filesystem, it would appear that the `mingw_open_append()`/`write()` combination would fail almost exactly like on some CIFS-mounted shares as had been reported in git-for-windows#2753, albeit with a different `errno` value. Let's handle that `errno` value just the same, by suggesting to set `windows.appendAtomically=false`. Signed-off-by: David Lomas <dl3@pale-eds.co.uk> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Windows 10 version 1511 (also known as Anniversary Update), according to https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/console/console-virtual-terminal-sequences introduced native support for ANSI sequence processing. This allows using colors from the entire 24-bit color range. All we need to do is test whether the console's "virtual processing support" can be enabled. If it can, we do not even need to start the `console_thread` to handle ANSI sequences. Or, almost all we need to do: When `console_thread()` does its work, it uses the Unicode-aware `write_console()` function to write to the Win32 Console, which supports Git for Windows' implicit convention that all text that is written is encoded in UTF-8. The same is not necessarily true if native ANSI sequence processing is used, as the output is then subject to the current code page. Let's ensure that the code page is set to `CP_UTF8` as long as Git writes to it. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
By default, the buffer type of Windows' `stdout` is unbuffered (_IONBF), and there is no need to manually fflush `stdout`. But some programs, such as the Windows Filtering Platform driver provided by the security software, may change the buffer type of `stdout` to full buffering. This nees `fflush(stdout)` to be called manually, otherwise there will be no output to `stdout`. Signed-off-by: MinarKotonoha <chengzhuo5@qq.com> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
A long time ago, we decided to run tests in Git for Windows' SDK with the default `winsymlinks` mode: copying instead of linking. This is still the default mode of MSYS2 to this day. However, this is not how most users run Git for Windows: As the majority of Git for Windows' users seem to be on Windows 10 and newer, likely having enabled Developer Mode (which allows creating symbolic links without administrator privileges), they will run with symlink support enabled. This is the reason why it is crucial to get the fixes for CVE-2024-? to the users, and also why it is crucial to ensure that the test suite exercises the related test cases. This commit ensures the latter. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
In order to be a better Windows citizenship, Git should save its configuration files on AppData folder. This can enables git configuration files be replicated between machines using the same Microsoft account logon which would reduce the friction of setting up Git on new systems. Therefore, if %APPDATA%\Git\config exists, we use it; otherwise $HOME/.config/git/config is used. Signed-off-by: Ariel Lourenco <ariellourenco@users.noreply.github.com>
Git LFS is now built with Go 1.21 which no longer supports Windows 7. However, Git for Windows still wants to support Windows 7. Ideally, Git LFS would re-introduce Windows 7 support until Git for Windows drops support for Windows 7, but that's not going to happen: git-for-windows#4996 (comment) The next best thing we can do is to let the users know what is happening, and how to get out of their fix, at least. This is not quite as easy as it would first seem because programs compiled with Go 1.21 or newer will simply throw an exception and fail with an Access Violation on Windows 7. The only way I found to address this is to replicate the logic from Go's very own `version` command (which can determine the Go version with which a given executable was built) to detect the situation, and in that case offer a helpful error message. This addresses git-for-windows#4996. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
The sparse tree walk algorithm was created in d5d2e93 (revision: implement sparse algorithm, 2019-01-16) and involves using the mark_trees_uninteresting_sparse() method. This method takes a repository and an oidset of tree IDs, some of which have the UNINTERESTING flag and some of which do not. Create a method that has an equivalent set of preconditions but uses a "dense" walk (recursively visits all reachable trees, as long as they have not previously been marked UNINTERESTING). This is an important difference from mark_tree_uninteresting(), which short-circuits if the given tree has the UNINTERESTING flag. A use of this method will be added in a later change, with a condition set whether the sparse or dense approach should be used. Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com>
While this command is definitely something we _want_, chances are that upstreaming this will require substantial changes. We still want to be able to experiment with this before that, to focus on what we need out of this command: To assist with diagnosing issues with large repositories, as well as to help monitoring the growth and the associated painpoints of such repositories. To that end, we are about to integrate this command into `microsoft/git`, to get the tool into the hands of users who need it most, with the idea to iterate in close collaboration between these users and the developers familar with Git's internals. However, we will definitely want to avoid letting anybody have the impression that this command, its exact inner workings, as well as its output format, are anywhere close to stable. To make that fact utterly clear (and thereby protect the freedom to iterate and innovate freely before upstreaming the command), let's mark its output as experimental in all-caps, as the first thing we do. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
In 245670c (credential-cache: check for windows specific errors, 2021-09-14) we concluded that on Windows we would always encounter ENETDOWN where we would expect ECONNREFUSED on POSIX systems, when connecting to unix sockets. As reported in [1], we do encounter ECONNREFUSED on Windows if the socket file doesn't exist, but the containing directory does and ENETDOWN if neither exists. We should handle this case like we do on non-windows systems. [1] git-for-windows#4762 (comment) This fixes git-for-windows#5314 Helped-by: M Hickford <mirth.hickford@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Matthias Aßhauer <mha1993@live.de> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
The reftable library goes out of its way to use its own set of allocator functions that can be configured using `reftable_set_alloc()`. However, Git does not configure this. That is not typically a problem, except when Git uses a custom allocator via some definitions in `git-compat-util.h`, as is the case in Git for Windows (which switched away from the long-unmaintained nedmalloc to mimalloc). Then, it is quite possible that Git assigns a `strbuf` (allocated via the custom allocator) to, say, the `refname` field of a `reftable_log_record` in `write_transaction_table()`, and later on asks the reftable library function `reftable_log_record_release()` to release it, but that function was compiled without using `git-compat-util.h` and hence calls regular `free()` (i.e. _not_ the custom allocator's own function). This has been a problem for a long time and it was a matter of some sort of "luck" that 1) reftables are not commonly used on Windows, and 2) mimalloc can often ignore gracefully when it is asked to release memory that it has not allocated. However, a recent update to `seen` brought this problem to the forefront, letting t1460 fail in Git for Windows, with symptoms much in the same way as the problem I had to address in d02c37c (t-reftable-basics: allow for `malloc` to be `#define`d, 2025-01-08) where exit code 127 was also produced in lieu of `STATUS_HEAP_CORRUPTION` (C0000374) because exit codes are only 7 bits wide. It was not possible to figure out what change in particular caused these new failures within a reasonable time frame, as there are too many changes in `seen` that conflict with Git for Windows' patches, I had to stop the investigation after spending four hours on it fruitlessly. To verify that this patch fixes the issue, I avoided using mimalloc and temporarily patched in a "custom allocator" that would more reliably point out problems, like this: diff --git a/refs/reftable-backend.c b/refs/reftable-backend.c index 68f3829..9421d630b9f5 100644 --- a/refs/reftable-backend.c +++ b/refs/reftable-backend.c @@ -353,6 +353,69 @@ static int reftable_be_fsync(int fd) return fsync_component(FSYNC_COMPONENT_REFERENCE, fd); } +#define DEBUG_REFTABLE_ALLOC +#ifdef DEBUG_REFTABLE_ALLOC +#include "khash.h" + +static inline khint_t __ac_X31_hash_ptr(void *ptr) +{ + union { + void *ptr; + char s[sizeof(void *)]; + } u; + size_t i; + khint_t h; + + u.ptr = ptr; + h = (khint_t)*u.s; + for (i = 0; i < sizeof(void *); i++) + h = (h << 5) - h + (khint_t)u.s[i]; + return h; +} + +#define kh_ptr_hash_func(key) __ac_X31_hash_ptr(key) +#define kh_ptr_hash_equal(a, b) ((a) == (b)) + +KHASH_INIT(ptr, void *, int, 0, kh_ptr_hash_func, kh_ptr_hash_equal) + +static kh_ptr_t *my_malloced; + +static void *my_malloc(size_t sz) +{ + int dummy; + void *ptr = malloc(sz); + if (ptr) + kh_put_ptr(my_malloced, ptr, &dummy); + return ptr; +} + +static void *my_realloc(void *ptr, size_t sz) +{ + int dummy; + if (ptr) { + khiter_t pos = kh_get_ptr(my_malloced, ptr); + if (pos >= kh_end(my_malloced)) + die("Was not my_malloc()ed: %p", ptr); + kh_del_ptr(my_malloced, pos); + } + ptr = realloc(ptr, sz); + if (ptr) + kh_put_ptr(my_malloced, ptr, &dummy); + return ptr; +} + +static void my_free(void *ptr) +{ + if (ptr) { + khiter_t pos = kh_get_ptr(my_malloced, ptr); + if (pos >= kh_end(my_malloced)) + die("Was not my_malloc()ed: %p", ptr); + kh_del_ptr(my_malloced, pos); + } + free(ptr); +} +#endif + static struct ref_store *reftable_be_init(struct repository *repo, const char *gitdir, unsigned int store_flags) @@ -362,6 +425,11 @@ static struct ref_store *reftable_be_init(struct repository *repo, int is_worktree; mode_t mask; +#ifdef DEBUG_REFTABLE_ALLOC + my_malloced = kh_init_ptr(); + reftable_set_alloc(my_malloc, my_realloc, my_free); +#endif + mask = umask(0); umask(mask); I briefly considered contributing this "custom allocator" patch, too, but it is unwieldy (for example, it would not work at all when compiling with mimalloc support) and it would only waste space (or even time, if a compile flag was introduced and exercised as part of the CI builds). Given that it is highly unlikely that Git will lose the new `reftable_set_alloc()` call by mistake, I rejected that idea as simply too wasteful. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Every once in a while, whitespace errors are introduced in Git for Windows' rebases to newer Git versions, simply by virtue of integrating upstream commits that do not follow upstream Git's own whitespace rule. In Git v2.50.0-rc0, for example, 03f2915 (xdiff: disable cleanup_records heuristic with --minimal, 2025-04-29) introduced a trailing space. Arguably, non-actionable alerts are worse than no alerts at all, so let's suppress those alerts that we cannot do anything about, anyway. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
The 2.53.0.rc0.windows release candidate had a regression where writing to stderr from a pre-push hook would error out. The regression was fixed in 2.53.0.rc1.windows and the test here ensures that this stays fixed. Signed-off-by: Thomas Braun <thomas.braun@virtuell-zuhause.de>
The previous commits disabled NTLM authentication by default due to its cryptographic weaknesses. Users can re-enable it via the config setting http.<url>.allowNTLMAuth, but this requires manual intervention. Credential helpers may have knowledge about which servers are trusted for NTLM authentication (e.g., known on-prem Azure DevOps instances). To allow them to signal this trust, introduce a simple negotiation: when NTLM is suppressed and the server offered it, Git advertises ntlm=suppressed to the credential helper. The helper can respond with ntlm=allow to re-enable NTLM for this request. This happens precisely at the point where we would otherwise warn the user about NTLM being suppressed, ensuring the capability is only advertised when relevant. Helped-by: Matthew John Cheetham <mjcheetham@outlook.com> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
It was already decided in ef22148 (clean: do not traverse mount points, 2018-12-07) that we shouldn't traverse NTFS junctions/bind mounts when using `git clean`, partly because they're sometimes used in worktrees. But the same check wasn't applied to `remove_dir_recurse()` in `dir.c`, which `git worktree remove` uses. So removing a worktree suffers the same problem we had previously with `git clean`. Let's add the same guard from ef22148. Signed-off-by: Maks Kuznia <makskuznia244@gmail.com>
The Git project followed Git for Windows' lead and added their Code of Conduct, based on the Contributor Covenant v1.4, later updated to v2.0. We adapt it slightly to Git for Windows. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
These are Git for Windows' Git GUI and gitk patches. We will have to decide at some point what to do about them, but that's a little lower priority (as Git GUI seems to be unmaintained for the time being, and the gitk maintainer keeps a very low profile on the Git mailing list, too). Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Getting started contributing to Git can be difficult on a Windows machine. CONTRIBUTING.md contains a guide to getting started, including detailed steps for setting up build tools, running tests, and submitting patches to upstream. [includes an example by Pratik Karki how to submit v2, v3, v4, etc.] Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <dstolee@microsoft.com>
Includes touch-ups by 마누엘, Philip Oakley and 孙卓识. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
With improvements by Clive Chan, Adric Norris, Ben Bodenmiller and Philip Oakley. Helped-by: Clive Chan <cc@clive.io> Helped-by: Adric Norris <landstander668@gmail.com> Helped-by: Ben Bodenmiller <bbodenmiller@hotmail.com> Helped-by: Philip Oakley <philipoakley@iee.org> Signed-off-by: Brendan Forster <brendan@github.com> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
The `--stdin` option was a well-established paradigm in other commands, therefore we implemented it in `git reset` for use by Visual Studio. Unfortunately, upstream Git decided that it is time to introduce `--pathspec-from-file` instead. To keep backwards-compatibility for some grace period, we therefore reinstate the `--stdin` option on top of the `--pathspec-from-file` option, but mark it firmly as deprecated. Helped-by: Victoria Dye <vdye@github.com> Helped-by: Matthew John Cheetham <mjcheetham@outlook.com> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
A fix for calling `vim` in Windows Terminal caused a regression and was reverted. We partially un-revert this, to get the fix again. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Git for Windows accepts pull requests; Core Git does not. Therefore we need to adjust the template (because it only matches core Git's project management style, not ours). Also: direct Git for Windows enhancements to their contributions page, space out the text for easy reading, and clarify that the mailing list is plain text, not HTML. Signed-off-by: Philip Oakley <philipoakley@iee.org> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Rather than using private IFTTT Applets that send mails to this maintainer whenever a new version of a Git for Windows component was released, let's use the power of GitHub workflows to make this process publicly visible. This workflow monitors the Atom/RSS feeds, and opens a ticket whenever a new version was released. Note: Bash sometimes releases multiple patched versions within a few minutes of each other (i.e. 5.1p1 through 5.1p4, 5.0p15 and 5.0p16). The MSYS2 runtime also has a similar system. We can address those patches as a group, so we shouldn't get multiple issues about them. Note further: We're not acting on newlib releases, OpenSSL alphas, Perl release candidates or non-stable Perl releases. There's no need to open issues about them. Co-authored-by: Matthias Aßhauer <mha1993@live.de> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Reintroduce the 'core.useBuiltinFSMonitor' config setting (originally added in 0a756b2 (fsmonitor: config settings are repository-specific, 2021-03-05)) after its removal from the upstream version of FSMonitor. Upstream, the 'core.useBuiltinFSMonitor' setting was rendered obsolete by "overloading" the 'core.fsmonitor' setting to take a boolean value. However, several applications (e.g., 'scalar') utilize the original config setting, so it should be preserved for a deprecation period before complete removal: * if 'core.fsmonitor' is a boolean, the user is correctly using the new config syntax; do not use 'core.useBuiltinFSMonitor'. * if 'core.fsmonitor' is unspecified, use 'core.useBuiltinFSMonitor'. * if 'core.fsmonitor' is a path, override and use the builtin FSMonitor if 'core.useBuiltinFSMonitor' is 'true'; otherwise, use the FSMonitor hook indicated by the path. Additionally, for this deprecation period, advise users to switch to using 'core.fsmonitor' to specify their use of the builtin FSMonitor. Signed-off-by: Victoria Dye <vdye@github.com>
This topic branch re-adds the deprecated --stdin/-z options to `git reset`. Those patches were overridden by a different set of options in the upstream Git project before we could propose `--stdin`. We offered this in MinGit to applications that wanted a safer way to pass lots of pathspecs to Git, and these applications will need to be adjusted. Instead of `--stdin`, `--pathspec-from-file=-` should be used, and instead of `-z`, `--pathspec-file-nul`. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
This is the recommended way on GitHub to describe policies revolving around security issues and about supported versions. Helped-by: Sven Strickroth <email@cs-ware.de> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
See https://docs.github.com/en/code-security/dependabot/working-with-dependabot/keeping-your-actions-up-to-date-with-dependabot#enabling-dependabot-version-updates-for-actions for details. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Originally introduced as `core.useBuiltinFSMonitor` in Git for Windows and developed, improved and stabilized there, the built-in FSMonitor only made it into upstream Git (after unnecessarily long hemming and hawing and throwing overly perfectionist style review sticks into the spokes) as `core.fsmonitor = true`. In Git for Windows, with this topic branch, we re-introduce the now-obsolete config setting, with warnings suggesting to existing users how to switch to the new config setting, with the intention to ultimately drop the patch at some stage. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Upstream Git does not test their tags with the expensive set of tests, so a couple of them seem quite broken for now, even so much as hanging indefinitely. It is outside of the responsibility of the Git for Windows project to fix upstream's own tests for platforms other than Windows, so let's not exercise them. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
…updates Start monitoring updates of Git for Windows' component in the open
Bumps [actions/cache](https://github.com/actions/cache) from 5 to 6. - [Release notes](https://github.com/actions/cache/releases) - [Changelog](https://github.com/actions/cache/blob/main/RELEASES.md) - [Commits](actions/cache@v5...v6) --- updated-dependencies: - dependency-name: actions/cache dependency-version: '6' dependency-type: direct:production update-type: version-update:semver-major ... Signed-off-by: dependabot[bot] <support@github.com>
Add a README.md for GitHub goodness. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Bumps [actions/cache](https://github.com/actions/cache) from 5 to 6. <details> <summary>Release notes</summary> <p><em>Sourced from <a href="https://github.com/actions/cache/releases">actions/cache's releases</a>.</em></p> <blockquote> <h2>v6.0.0</h2> <h2>What's Changed</h2> <ul> <li>Update packages, migrate to ESM by <a href="https://github.com/Samirat"><code>@Samirat</code></a> in <a href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/cache/pull/1760">actions/cache#1760</a></li> </ul> <p><strong>Full Changelog</strong>: <a href="https://github.com/actions/cache/compare/v5...v6.0.0">https://github.com/actions/cache/compare/v5...v6.0.0</a></p> <h2>v5.1.0</h2> <h2>What's Changed</h2> <ul> <li>Bump <code>@actions/cache</code> to v5.1.0 - handle read-only cache access by <a href="https://github.com/jasongin"><code>@jasongin</code></a> in <a href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/cache/pull/1775">actions/cache#1775</a></li> </ul> <p><strong>Full Changelog</strong>: <a href="https://github.com/actions/cache/compare/v5...v5.1.0">https://github.com/actions/cache/compare/v5...v5.1.0</a></p> <h2>v5.0.5</h2> <h2>What's Changed</h2> <ul> <li>Update ts-http-runtime dependency by <a href="https://github.com/yacaovsnc"><code>@yacaovsnc</code></a> in <a href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/cache/pull/1747">actions/cache#1747</a></li> </ul> <p><strong>Full Changelog</strong>: <a href="https://github.com/actions/cache/compare/v5...v5.0.5">https://github.com/actions/cache/compare/v5...v5.0.5</a></p> <h2>v5.0.4</h2> <h2>What's Changed</h2> <ul> <li>Add release instructions and update maintainer docs by <a href="https://github.com/Link"><code>@Link</code></a>- in <a href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/cache/pull/1696">actions/cache#1696</a></li> <li>Potential fix for code scanning alert no. 52: Workflow does not contain permissions by <a href="https://github.com/Link"><code>@Link</code></a>- in <a href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/cache/pull/1697">actions/cache#1697</a></li> <li>Fix workflow permissions and cleanup workflow names / formatting by <a href="https://github.com/Link"><code>@Link</code></a>- in <a href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/cache/pull/1699">actions/cache#1699</a></li> <li>docs: Update examples to use the latest version by <a href="https://github.com/XZTDean"><code>@XZTDean</code></a> in <a href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/cache/pull/1690">actions/cache#1690</a></li> <li>Fix proxy integration tests by <a href="https://github.com/Link"><code>@Link</code></a>- in <a href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/cache/pull/1701">actions/cache#1701</a></li> <li>Fix cache key in examples.md for bun.lock by <a href="https://github.com/RyPeck"><code>@RyPeck</code></a> in <a href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/cache/pull/1722">actions/cache#1722</a></li> <li>Update dependencies & patch security vulnerabilities by <a href="https://github.com/Link"><code>@Link</code></a>- in <a href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/cache/pull/1738">actions/cache#1738</a></li> </ul> <h2>New Contributors</h2> <ul> <li><a href="https://github.com/XZTDean"><code>@XZTDean</code></a> made their first contribution in <a href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/cache/pull/1690">actions/cache#1690</a></li> <li><a href="https://github.com/RyPeck"><code>@RyPeck</code></a> made their first contribution in <a href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/cache/pull/1722">actions/cache#1722</a></li> </ul> <p><strong>Full Changelog</strong>: <a href="https://github.com/actions/cache/compare/v5...v5.0.4">https://github.com/actions/cache/compare/v5...v5.0.4</a></p> <h2>v5.0.3</h2> <h2>What's Changed</h2> <ul> <li>Bump <code>@actions/cache</code> to v5.0.5 (Resolves: <a href="https://github.com/actions/cache/security/dependabot/33">https://github.com/actions/cache/security/dependabot/33</a>)</li> <li>Bump <code>@actions/core</code> to v2.0.3</li> </ul> <p><strong>Full Changelog</strong>: <a href="https://github.com/actions/cache/compare/v5...v5.0.3">https://github.com/actions/cache/compare/v5...v5.0.3</a></p> <h2>v.5.0.2</h2> <h1>v5.0.2</h1> <h2>What's Changed</h2> <!-- raw HTML omitted --> </blockquote> <p>... (truncated)</p> </details> <details> <summary>Changelog</summary> <p><em>Sourced from <a href="https://github.com/actions/cache/blob/main/RELEASES.md">actions/cache's changelog</a>.</em></p> <blockquote> <h1>Releases</h1> <h2>How to prepare a release</h2> <blockquote> <p>[!NOTE] Relevant for maintainers with write access only.</p> </blockquote> <ol> <li>Switch to a new branch from <code>main</code>.</li> <li>Run <code>npm test</code> to ensure all tests are passing.</li> <li>Update the version in <a href="https://github.com/actions/cache/blob/main/package.json"><code>https://github.com/actions/cache/blob/main/package.json</code></a>.</li> <li>Run <code>npm run build</code> to update the compiled files.</li> <li>Update this <a href="https://github.com/actions/cache/blob/main/RELEASES.md"><code>https://github.com/actions/cache/blob/main/RELEASES.md</code></a> with the new version and changes in the <code>## Changelog</code> section.</li> <li>Run <code>licensed cache</code> to update the license report.</li> <li>Run <code>licensed status</code> and resolve any warnings by updating the <a href="https://github.com/actions/cache/blob/main/.licensed.yml"><code>https://github.com/actions/cache/blob/main/.licensed.yml</code></a> file with the exceptions.</li> <li>Commit your changes and push your branch upstream.</li> <li>Open a pull request against <code>main</code> and get it reviewed and merged.</li> <li>Draft a new release <a href="https://github.com/actions/cache/releases">https://github.com/actions/cache/releases</a> use the same version number used in <code>package.json</code> <ol> <li>Create a new tag with the version number.</li> <li>Auto generate release notes and update them to match the changes you made in <code>RELEASES.md</code>.</li> <li>Toggle the set as the latest release option.</li> <li>Publish the release.</li> </ol> </li> <li>Navigate to <a href="https://github.com/actions/cache/actions/workflows/release-new-action-version.yml">https://github.com/actions/cache/actions/workflows/release-new-action-version.yml</a> <ol> <li>There should be a workflow run queued with the same version number.</li> <li>Approve the run to publish the new version and update the major tags for this action.</li> </ol> </li> </ol> <h2>Changelog</h2> <h3>6.1.0</h3> <ul> <li>Bump <code>@actions/cache</code> to v6.1.0 to pick up <a href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/toolkit/pull/2435">actions/toolkit#2435 Handle cache write error due to read-only token</a></li> <li>Switch redundant "Cache save failed" warning to debug log in save-only</li> </ul> <h3>6.0.0</h3> <ul> <li>Updated <code>@actions/cache</code> to ^6.0.1, <code>@actions/core</code> to ^3.0.1, <code>@actions/exec</code> to ^3.0.0, <code>@actions/io</code> to ^3.0.2</li> <li>Migrated to ESM module system</li> <li>Upgraded Jest to v30 and test infrastructure to be ESM compatible</li> </ul> <h3>5.0.4</h3> <ul> <li>Bump <code>minimatch</code> to v3.1.5 (fixes ReDoS via globstar patterns)</li> <li>Bump <code>undici</code> to v6.24.1 (WebSocket decompression bomb protection, header validation fixes)</li> <li>Bump <code>fast-xml-parser</code> to v5.5.6</li> </ul> <h3>5.0.3</h3> <ul> <li>Bump <code>@actions/cache</code> to v5.0.5 (Resolves: <a href="https://github.com/actions/cache/security/dependabot/33">https://github.com/actions/cache/security/dependabot/33</a>)</li> <li>Bump <code>@actions/core</code> to v2.0.3</li> </ul> <h3>5.0.2</h3> <!-- raw HTML omitted --> </blockquote> <p>... (truncated)</p> </details> <details> <summary>Commits</summary> <ul> <li><a href="https://github.com/actions/cache/commit/55cc8345863c7cc4c66a329aec7e433d2d1c52a9"><code>55cc834</code></a> Merge pull request <a href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/cache/issues/1768">#1768</a> from jasongin/readonly-cache</li> <li><a href="https://github.com/actions/cache/commit/d8cd72f230726cdf4457ebb61ec1b593a8d12337"><code>d8cd72f</code></a> Bump <code>@actions/cache</code> to v6.1.0 - handle cache write error due to RO token</li> <li><a href="https://github.com/actions/cache/commit/2c8a9bd7457de244a408f35966fab2fb45fda9c8"><code>2c8a9bd</code></a> Merge pull request <a href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/cache/issues/1760">#1760</a> from actions/samirat/esm_migration_and_package_update</li> <li><a href="https://github.com/actions/cache/commit/e9b91fdc3fea7d79165fceb79042ef45c2d51023"><code>e9b91fd</code></a> Prettier fixes</li> <li><a href="https://github.com/actions/cache/commit/e4884b8ff7f92ef6b52c79eda480bbc86e685adb"><code>e4884b8</code></a> Rebuild dist</li> <li><a href="https://github.com/actions/cache/commit/10baf0191a3c426ea0fa4a3253a5c04233b6e18f"><code>10baf01</code></a> Fixed licenses</li> <li><a href="https://github.com/actions/cache/commit/e39b386c9004d72a15d864ade8c0b3a702d47a37"><code>e39b386</code></a> Fix test mock return order</li> <li><a href="https://github.com/actions/cache/commit/b6928203372a8571ff984c0c883ef3a1adfb0c06"><code>b692820</code></a> PR feedback</li> <li><a href="https://github.com/actions/cache/commit/60749128a44d25d3c520a489e576380cf00ff3f1"><code>6074912</code></a> Rebuild dist bundles as ESM to match type:module</li> <li><a href="https://github.com/actions/cache/commit/5a912e8b4af820fa082a0e75cfd2c782f8fbfe0e"><code>5a912e8</code></a> Fix lint and jest issues</li> <li>Additional commits viewable in <a href="https://github.com/actions/cache/compare/v5...v6">compare view</a></li> </ul> </details> <br /> [](https://docs.github.com/en/github/managing-security-vulnerabilities/about-dependabot-security-updates#about-compatibility-scores) Dependabot will resolve any conflicts with this PR as long as you don't alter it yourself. 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) While upstreaming those patches, I've been asked to adjust them. This backports those fixes. Of course, the _real_ reason to do this _now_ is that I need _some_ PR to make a new Git for Windows release (to address [the NTLM](git-for-windows#6308) issue).
Mirror what git survey already reports: lightweight tags (pointing straight at a commit/tree/blob) and annotated tags (pointing at an OBJ_TAG that is itself stored as a separate object) are different things in many monorepo contexts, and one of the differences git survey users routinely care about. Add an annotated_tags counter to struct ref_stats, populate it in count_references() by peeking at the ref OID's object type, and expose it as a sub-row under Tags in the table output and as references.tags.annotated.count in the machine-readable formats. Step toward pivoting the standalone git survey command onto git repo structure; this fills the first of the four feature gaps documented in the assessment. Tests in t1901 widened to assert the new row and key. Assisted-by: Opus 4.7 Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
`git repo structure` walks every reference enumerated by `refs_for_each_ref()` and feeds each reference's tip into the path walk that produces the object counts. There is no way to scope the inquiry to a subset of refs, even though that is the most common need when an operator is investigating what part of the history is driving cost: only branches, only release tags, only one remote's view, etc. Add a single `--ref-filter=<pattern>` option that, when given, restricts both the reference count and the object walk to refs whose full name matches one of the patterns. The option is repeatable; multiple patterns form a union, so `--ref-filter='refs/heads/*' --ref-filter='refs/tags/v*'` includes local branches and tags whose short name starts with `v`. Patterns use `wildmatch()` with `WM_PATHNAME` semantics so a `*` does not cross `/`, matching the convention used by `git for-each-ref` positional arguments. Choosing a single flexible filter, rather than a proliferation of per-kind flags like `--branches`, `--tags`, `--remotes`, keeps the option surface small and lets the same mechanism express narrow selections the per-kind flags could not, such as "only release tags" (`'refs/tags/v*'`) or "only one remote's branches" (`'refs/remotes/origin/*'`). Without `--ref-filter`, behaviour is unchanged: every ref `refs_for_each_ref()` enumerates contributes. Both the reference counter and the path-walk seeding (via `add_pending_oid()`) sit on the same callback, so an early return when no pattern matches naturally excludes a ref from both. No separate object-walk machinery is needed. Cover the two interesting code paths with tests in t1901: a single filter narrowing to branches, and two filters unioning to include both branches and tags. Assisted-by: Opus 4.7 Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
`git survey` distinguishes itself from `git repo structure` largely by its path-level reporting: in addition to whole-repo totals it lists the paths whose object histories dominate the repository, ranked by raw count, on-disk size, and inflated size, separately for trees and blobs. That is often the most actionable output from `git survey`, since it points an operator at the directories and files that should be reviewed for cleanup, sparse-checkout exclusion, or rewriting. `git repo structure` already drives the same path-walk traversal that `git survey` uses to gather its per-path numbers; the callback simply discards the path. Aggregate per-(path, type) summaries inside that existing callback and add a bounded, descending-sorted "top-N" table keyed by each of the three axes. Gate the feature behind a new `--top=<n>` option, defaulting to 0, so unadorned invocations are unaffected and pay no extra work for the top-N tracking. Mirror the sort and eviction strategy from `builtin/survey.c`: keep an array of at most N entries sorted from largest to smallest, walk it from the bottom on each candidate, and shift entries down when a new one belongs. Compared to `builtin/survey.c`, drop the void-pointer indirection in the table data, type the comparator's arguments, and fold the trivial comparators into the `(a > b) - (a < b)` idiom. For the human-readable `table` output, extend the existing nested bullet layout with two new top-level sections, `* Top trees` and `* Top blobs`, each containing three sub-tables (`Top by count`, `Top by disk size`, `Top by inflated size`). The path becomes the row name and the relevant scalar becomes the value, reusing `stats_table_count_addf` and `stats_table_size_addf` so units and column alignment match the rest of the table. For the `lines`/`nul` key-value formats, emit one `objects.<type>.top.by_<axis>.<rank>.path=<path>` entry alongside an `objects.<type>.top.by_<axis>.<rank>.<axis>=<value>` entry per ranked path, so consumers can dispatch by axis without parsing the schema. The root tree's path is the empty string as produced by the path-walk machinery; preserve that as-is to stay faithful to the upstream representation rather than fabricating a placeholder. This is the first piece of folding `git survey`'s functionality into `git repo structure`. Subsequent commits will add the corresponding configuration knob and, eventually, turn `git survey` into a thin deprecated shim over `git repo structure`. Assisted-by: Opus 4.7 Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
The preceding commit added `--top=<n>` to `git repo structure`,
reporting the top-N paths per type ranked by count, on-disk size, and
inflated size. Cover the three behaviors that matter for that option:
* Without `--top`, the key-value output emits no `top.*` keys, so
existing parsers stay unaffected.
* `--top=N` produces exactly N ranked entries on each of the six
`objects.<type>.top.by_<axis>` axes (count/disk_size/inflated_size
crossed with trees/blobs), and a constructed input where one blob
is several orders of magnitude bigger than the other lets us
assert the ordering on the disk-size and inflated-size axes.
* A negative `--top` is rejected with a non-zero exit and a message
naming the constraint, so a typo cannot silently degrade into the
default zero.
Avoid grep patterns starting with `--`; grep would parse the leading
double dash as an option terminator.
Assisted-by: Opus 4.7
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
`git survey` exposes its `--top` default via `survey.top` so that a site or per-repository operator can switch the detail tables on once and have every subsequent invocation include them. Mirror that ergonomics for `git repo structure` so that, as `git survey`'s functionality is folded into `git repo structure`, the configuration side of the migration story stays equivalent. Add a small `git_config_int` callback bound to `repo.structure.top` and invoke it before `parse_options()`, so a `--top=<N>` on the command line cleanly overrides the configured default (including `--top=0` to opt out of the detail tables when configuration enables them). Reject negative configured values with the same wording as the command-line guard, since `git_config_int()` happily returns negative integers. Document the new variable in a fresh `Documentation/config/repo.adoc` and wire it into the alphabetical includes in `Documentation/config.adoc` between `repack.adoc` and `rerere.adoc`. Cover the precedence behaviour with a t1901 test: a configured value enables the tables by default, and a command-line `--top=0` suppresses them again. Note that the reported paths respect the `core.quotePath` setting. Assisted-by: Opus 4.7 Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
`git survey` started life as an experimental scale-measurement tool; the preceding commits give `git repo structure` the path-level detail tables and ref-scoping mechanism that were `git survey`'s main draw, so the two now overlap substantially. Plan the migration explicitly: add a short notice at the top of the description making clear which of `git survey`'s knobs map to which `git repo structure` option, and state that a future release will turn `git survey` into a thin shim over `git repo structure`. Putting the notice in the description (rather than only the synopsis) ensures it shows up in `git help survey` rendering before the reader sees any option specifics, so an operator skimming the page learns about the replacement before adopting any survey-specific flags. Assisted-by: Opus 4.7 Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
`git survey` was an experimental scale-measurement tool whose
distinctive features (ref-kind filters, top-N path tables) are now
all available in `git repo structure`. With the path-level reporting
in place (commits "repo: filter the structure scope via
--ref-filter=<pattern>" and "repo: report top-N paths by count, disk,
and inflated size in structure"), there is no functionality `git
survey` provides that `git repo structure` cannot.
Replace the 764-line `git survey` implementation with a roughly
hundred-line shim that:
* Accepts the existing `git survey` command line so callers in
scripts continue to parse without changes.
* Emits a deprecation warning naming the replacement command, so
interactive users learn about the migration target.
* Translates the survey-specific knobs into the equivalent
`git repo structure` invocation and re-execs the canonical
command via `execv_git_cmd()`. Per-kind ref selectors fan out
into the corresponding `refs/heads/*`, `refs/tags/*`, etc.
`--ref-filter` patterns; `--top=<N>` is forwarded directly;
`--all-refs` becomes the absence of any `--ref-filter`.
Two survey options have no `git repo structure` counterpart:
`--verbose` controlled per-step trace output the new command does
not emit, and `--detached` selected the detached HEAD which
`git repo structure` does not enumerate separately. Both are
silently accepted and produce a single warning each, so old
invocations keep working while the absence of these knobs in `git
repo structure` is made visible.
Rewrite t8100 to assert the shim's contract: the deprecation
warning is printed, the output is byte-identical to a corresponding
`git repo structure` invocation, and the per-kind selector
translation produces the right `--ref-filter` pattern. The
preceding survey-specific output assertions (the multi-column
plaintext tables) no longer apply, since `git repo structure`'s
output format is now the canonical one and is covered by t1901.
The `survey.*` configuration keys (`survey.top`, `survey.progress`,
`survey.verbose`) are no longer honored by the shim. They were
mirrored by the preceding `repo.structure.top` work for the most
useful knob; users with `survey.top` set in config should migrate
to `repo.structure.top`. This is a backward-incompatible removal
documented by the deprecation notice in `git-survey.adoc`.
Assisted-by: Opus 4.7
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
…it-for-windows#6268) `git survey` was always experimental, and I never got around to upstreaming it to make it non-experimental. In the meantime, the `git repo structure` command was upstreamed upstream, which covers most of the same ground with a cleaner option surface and a stable output contract. This PR closes the remaining gap (annotated-tag breakdown, ref scoping, top-N paths by count/disk/inflated, and the corresponding configuration knob) and then turns `git survey` into a thin shim that warns about deprecation, translates its old command line into the equivalent `git repo structure` invocation, and re-execs the canonical command. Net result: one user-facing tool to maintain and to teach instead of two. The intent is that scripts pinned to `git survey` keep working (a warning aside), and that operators have a single answer when they ask "how do I see what's making my repository large?". The `survey.*` configuration keys are intentionally dropped; the only one that mattered, `survey.top`, has a direct replacement in `repo.structure.top`.
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Workflow run
Rebase Summary: seen
From: f704232fb1 (Turn
git surveyinto a deprecated shim overgit repo structure(git-for-windows#6268), 2026-07-08) (a21cb4dc51..f704232fb1)Resolved: 997b337 (Some amendments for the
hashliteral_tsize fixes (git-for-windows#6311), 2026-07-03)Resolved by taking HEAD's version for all files (since merge diff from parent1 only modified 2 files), then applied the merge's custom changes: removed !LONG_IS_64BIT prereq in t/t1007-hash-object.sh and kept duplicate reftable_set_alloc line in lib/refs/reftable-backend.c
Range-diff
1: 997b337 ! 1: f25402c Some amendments for the
hashliteral_tsize fixes (Some amendments for thehashliteral_tsize fixes git#6311)@@ Commit message to make a new Git for Windows release (to address [the NTLM](https://github.com/git-for-windows/git/issues/6308) issue). - ## lib/refs/reftable-backend.c ## -@@ lib/refs/reftable-backend.c: static struct ref_store *reftable_be_init(struct repository *repo, + ## .github/workflows/main.yml ## + remerge CONFLICT (content): Merge conflict in .github/workflows/main.yml + index 43b8b5193c..57ad4ba64f 100644 + --- .github/workflows/main.yml + +++ .github/workflows/main.yml +@@ .github/workflows/main.yml: jobs: + uses: microsoft/setup-msbuild@v3 + - name: copy dlls to root + shell: cmd +-<<<<<<< 04a0197a49 (build(deps): bump actions/cache from 5 to 6 (#6303)) + run: lib\compat\vcbuild\vcpkg_copy_dlls.bat release ${{ matrix.arch }}-windows + - name: generate Visual Studio solution + shell: bash + run: | + cmake `pwd`/contrib/buildsystems/ -DCMAKE_PREFIX_PATH=`pwd`/lib/compat/vcbuild/vcpkg/installed/${{ matrix.arch }}-windows \ +-======= +- run: compat\vcbuild\vcpkg_copy_dlls.bat release ${{ matrix.arch }}-windows +- - name: generate Visual Studio solution +- shell: bash +- run: | +- cmake `pwd`/contrib/buildsystems/ -DCMAKE_PREFIX_PATH=`pwd`/compat/vcbuild/vcpkg/installed/${{ matrix.arch }}-windows \ +->>>>>>> c8dff95af8 (fixup! hash-object: add a >4GB/LLP64 test case using filtered input) + -DNO_GETTEXT=YesPlease -DPERL_TESTS=OFF -DPYTHON_TESTS=OFF -DCURL_NO_CURL_CMAKE=ON -DCMAKE_GENERATOR_PLATFORM=${{ matrix.arch }} -DVCPKG_ARCH=${{ matrix.arch }}-windows -DHOST_CPU=${{ matrix.arch }} + - name: MSBuild + run: | + + ## Makefile ## + remerge CONFLICT (content): Merge conflict in Makefile + index b40c216c54..6cf4711d97 100644 + --- Makefile + +++ Makefile +@@ Makefile: else + endif + + ifdef LAZYLOAD_LIBCURL +-<<<<<<< 04a0197a49 (build(deps): bump actions/cache from 5 to 6 (#6303)) + LAZYLOAD_LIBCURL_OBJ = lib/compat/lazyload-curl.o +-======= +- LAZYLOAD_LIBCURL_OBJ = compat/lazyload-curl.o +->>>>>>> c8dff95af8 (fixup! hash-object: add a >4GB/LLP64 test case using filtered input) + OBJECTS += $(LAZYLOAD_LIBCURL_OBJ) + # The `CURL_STATICLIB` constant must be defined to avoid seeing the functions + # declared as DLL imports +@@ Makefile: endif + endif + ifdef USE_CURL_FOR_IMAP_SEND + BASIC_CFLAGS += -DUSE_CURL_FOR_IMAP_SEND +-<<<<<<< 04a0197a49 (build(deps): bump actions/cache from 5 to 6 (#6303)) + IMAP_SEND_BUILDDEPS = lib/http.o $(LAZYLOAD_LIBCURL_OBJ) +-======= +- IMAP_SEND_BUILDDEPS = http.o $(LAZYLOAD_LIBCURL_OBJ) +->>>>>>> c8dff95af8 (fixup! hash-object: add a >4GB/LLP64 test case using filtered input) + IMAP_SEND_LDFLAGS += $(CURL_LIBCURL) + endif + ifndef NO_EXPAT +@@ Makefile: git-imap-send$X: imap-send.o $(IMAP_SEND_BUILDDEPS) GIT-LDFLAGS $(GITLIBS) + $(QUIET_LINK)$(CC) $(ALL_CFLAGS) -o $@ $(ALL_LDFLAGS) $(filter %.o,$^) \ + $(IMAP_SEND_LDFLAGS) $(LIBS) + +-<<<<<<< 04a0197a49 (build(deps): bump actions/cache from 5 to 6 (#6303)) + git-http-fetch$X: lib/http.o lib/http-walker.o http-fetch.o $(LAZYLOAD_LIBCURL_OBJ) GIT-LDFLAGS $(GITLIBS) + $(QUIET_LINK)$(CC) $(ALL_CFLAGS) -o $@ $(ALL_LDFLAGS) $(filter %.o,$^) \ + $(CURL_LIBCURL) $(LIBS) + git-http-push$X: lib/http.o http-push.o $(LAZYLOAD_LIBCURL_OBJ) GIT-LDFLAGS $(GITLIBS) +-======= +-git-http-fetch$X: http.o http-walker.o http-fetch.o $(LAZYLOAD_LIBCURL_OBJ) GIT-LDFLAGS $(GITLIBS) +- $(QUIET_LINK)$(CC) $(ALL_CFLAGS) -o $@ $(ALL_LDFLAGS) $(filter %.o,$^) \ +- $(CURL_LIBCURL) $(LIBS) +-git-http-push$X: http.o http-push.o $(LAZYLOAD_LIBCURL_OBJ) GIT-LDFLAGS $(GITLIBS) +->>>>>>> c8dff95af8 (fixup! hash-object: add a >4GB/LLP64 test case using filtered input) + $(QUIET_LINK)$(CC) $(ALL_CFLAGS) -o $@ $(ALL_LDFLAGS) $(filter %.o,$^) \ + $(CURL_LIBCURL) $(EXPAT_LIBEXPAT) $(LIBS) + +@@ Makefile: $(REMOTE_CURL_ALIASES): $(REMOTE_CURL_PRIMARY) + ln -s $< $@ 2>/dev/null || \ + cp $< $@ + +-<<<<<<< 04a0197a49 (build(deps): bump actions/cache from 5 to 6 (#6303)) + $(REMOTE_CURL_PRIMARY): remote-curl.o lib/http.o lib/http-walker.o $(LAZYLOAD_LIBCURL_OBJ) GIT-LDFLAGS $(GITLIBS) +-======= +-$(REMOTE_CURL_PRIMARY): remote-curl.o http.o http-walker.o $(LAZYLOAD_LIBCURL_OBJ) GIT-LDFLAGS $(GITLIBS) +->>>>>>> c8dff95af8 (fixup! hash-object: add a >4GB/LLP64 test case using filtered input) + $(QUIET_LINK)$(CC) $(ALL_CFLAGS) -o $@ $(ALL_LDFLAGS) $(filter %.o,$^) \ + $(CURL_LIBCURL) $(EXPAT_LIBEXPAT) $(LIBS) + + + ## builtin/fast-import.c ## + remerge CONFLICT (content): Merge conflict in builtin/fast-import.c + index 895a5fa907..5edad7edf6 100644 + --- builtin/fast-import.c + +++ builtin/fast-import.c +@@ builtin/fast-import.c: static int store_object( + struct object_entry *e; + unsigned char hdr[96]; + struct object_id oid; +-<<<<<<< 04a0197a49 (build(deps): bump actions/cache from 5 to 6 (#6303)) + size_t hdrlen, deltalen = 0; +-======= +- size_t hdrlen, deltalen; +->>>>>>> c8dff95af8 (fixup! hash-object: add a >4GB/LLP64 test case using filtered input) + struct git_hash_ctx c; + git_zstream s; + struct repo_config_values *cfg = repo_config_values(the_repository); + + ## ci/lib.sh ## + remerge CONFLICT (content): Merge conflict in ci/lib.sh + index 80c16028dc..f31a36ceeb 100755 + --- ci/lib.sh + +++ ci/lib.sh +@@ ci/lib.sh: export SKIP_DASHED_BUILT_INS=YesPlease + # In order to catch bugs introduced at integration time by mismerges, + # enable the long tests for pushes to the integration branches as well. + test -z "$MSYSTEM" || +-<<<<<<< 04a0197a49 (build(deps): bump actions/cache from 5 to 6 (#6303)) + case "$CI_EVENT,$CI_BRANCH" in +-======= +-case "$GITHUB_EVENT_NAME,$CI_BRANCH" in +->>>>>>> c8dff95af8 (fixup! hash-object: add a >4GB/LLP64 test case using filtered input) + pull_request,*|push,*next*|push,*master*|push,*main*|push,*maint*) + export GIT_TEST_LONG=${GIT_TEST_LONG:-true} + ;; + + ## compat/win32/dirent.h (deleted) ## + remerge CONFLICT (modify/delete): compat/win32/dirent.h deleted in 04a0197a49 (build(deps): bump actions/cache from 5 to 6 (#6303)) and modified in c8dff95af8 (fixup! hash-object: add a >4GB/LLP64 test case using filtered input). Version c8dff95af8 (fixup! hash-object: add a >4GB/LLP64 test case using filtered input) of compat/win32/dirent.h left in tree. + index a58a8075fd..0000000000 + --- compat/win32/dirent.h + +++ /dev/null +@@ +-#ifndef DIRENT_H +-#define DIRENT_H +- +-#define DT_UNKNOWN 0 +-#define DT_DIR 1 +-#define DT_REG 2 +-#define DT_LNK 3 +- +-struct dirent { +- unsigned char d_type; /* file type to prevent lstat after readdir */ +- char d_name[/* FLEX_ARRAY */]; /* file name */ +-}; +- +-/* +- * Base DIR structure, contains pointers to readdir/closedir implementations so +- * that opendir may choose a concrete implementation on a call-by-call basis. +- */ +-typedef struct DIR { +- struct dirent *(*preaddir)(struct DIR *dir); +- int (*pclosedir)(struct DIR *dir); +-} DIR; +- +-/* default dirent implementation */ +-extern DIR *dirent_opendir(const char *dirname); +- +-#define opendir git_opendir +- +-/* current dirent implementation */ +-extern DIR *(*opendir)(const char *dirname); +- +-#define readdir(dir) (dir->preaddir(dir)) +-#define closedir(dir) (dir->pclosedir(dir)) +- +-#endif /* DIRENT_H */ + + ## compat/win32/path-utils.c (deleted) ## + remerge CONFLICT (modify/delete): compat/win32/path-utils.c deleted in 04a0197a49 (build(deps): bump actions/cache from 5 to 6 (#6303)) and modified in c8dff95af8 (fixup! hash-object: add a >4GB/LLP64 test case using filtered input). Version c8dff95af8 (fixup! hash-object: add a >4GB/LLP64 test case using filtered input) of compat/win32/path-utils.c left in tree. + index c4fea0301b..0000000000 + --- compat/win32/path-utils.c + +++ /dev/null +@@ +-#define USE_THE_REPOSITORY_VARIABLE +- +-#include "../../git-compat-util.h" +-#include "../../environment.h" +-#include "../../wrapper.h" +-#include "../../strbuf.h" +-#include "../../versioncmp.h" +- +-int win32_has_dos_drive_prefix(const char *path) +-{ +- int i; +- +- /* +- * Does it start with an ASCII letter (i.e. highest bit not set), +- * followed by a colon? +- */ +- if (!(0x80 & (unsigned char)*path)) +- return *path && path[1] == ':' ? 2 : 0; +- +- /* +- * While drive letters must be letters of the English alphabet, it is +- * possible to assign virtually _any_ Unicode character via `subst` as +- * a drive letter to "virtual drives". Even `1`, or `ä`. Or fun stuff +- * like this: +- * +- * subst ֍: %USERPROFILE%\Desktop +- */ +- for (i = 1; i < 4 && (0x80 & (unsigned char)path[i]); i++) +- ; /* skip first UTF-8 character */ +- return path[i] == ':' ? i + 1 : 0; +-} +- +-int win32_skip_dos_drive_prefix(char **path) +-{ +- int ret = has_dos_drive_prefix(*path); +- *path += ret; +- return ret; +-} +- +-int win32_offset_1st_component(const char *path) +-{ +- char *pos = (char *)path; +- +- /* unc paths */ +- if (!skip_dos_drive_prefix(&pos) && +- is_dir_sep(pos[0]) && is_dir_sep(pos[1])) { +- /* skip server name */ +- pos = strpbrk(pos + 2, "\\/"); +- if (!pos) +- return 0; /* Error: malformed unc path */ +- +- do { +- pos++; +- } while (*pos && !is_dir_sep(*pos)); +- } +- +- return pos + is_dir_sep(*pos) - path; +-} +- +-int win32_fspathncmp(const char *a, const char *b, size_t count) +-{ +- int diff; +- +- for (;;) { +- if (!count--) +- return 0; +- if (!*a) +- return *b ? -1 : 0; +- if (!*b) +- return +1; +- +- if (is_dir_sep(*a)) { +- if (!is_dir_sep(*b)) +- return -1; +- a++; +- b++; +- continue; +- } else if (is_dir_sep(*b)) +- return +1; +- +- diff = ignore_case ? +- (unsigned char)tolower(*a) - (int)(unsigned char)tolower(*b) : +- (unsigned char)*a - (int)(unsigned char)*b; +- if (diff) +- return diff; +- a++; +- b++; +- } +-} +- +-int win32_fspathcmp(const char *a, const char *b) +-{ +- return win32_fspathncmp(a, b, (size_t)-1); +-} +- +-static int read_at(int fd, char *buffer, size_t offset, size_t size) +-{ +- if (lseek(fd, offset, SEEK_SET) < 0) { +- fprintf(stderr, "could not seek to 0x%x\n", (unsigned int)offset); +- return -1; +- } +- +- return read_in_full(fd, buffer, size); +-} +- +-static size_t le16(const char *buffer) +-{ +- unsigned char *u = (unsigned char *)buffer; +- return u[0] | (u[1] << 8); +-} +- +-static size_t le32(const char *buffer) +-{ +- return le16(buffer) | (le16(buffer + 2) << 16); +-} +- +-/* +- * Determine the Go version of a given executable, if it was built with Go. +- * +- * This recapitulates the logic from +- * https://github.com/golang/go/blob/master/src/cmd/go/internal/version/version.go +- * (without requiring the user to install `go.exe` to find out). +- */ +-static ssize_t get_go_version(const char *path, char *go_version, size_t go_version_size) +-{ +- int fd = open(path, O_RDONLY); +- char buffer[1024]; +- off_t offset; +- size_t num_sections, opt_header_size, i; +- char *p = NULL, *q; +- ssize_t res = -1; +- +- if (fd < 0) +- return -1; +- +- if (read_in_full(fd, buffer, 2) < 0) +- goto fail; +- +- /* +- * Parse the PE file format, for more details, see +- * https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portable_Executable#Layout and +- * https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/debug/pe-format +- */ +- if (buffer[0] != 'M' || buffer[1] != 'Z') +- goto fail; +- +- if (read_at(fd, buffer, 0x3c, 4) < 0) +- goto fail; +- +- /* Read the `PE\0\0` signature and the COFF file header */ +- offset = le32(buffer); +- if (read_at(fd, buffer, offset, 24) < 0) +- goto fail; +- +- if (buffer[0] != 'P' || buffer[1] != 'E' || buffer[2] != '\0' || buffer[3] != '\0') +- goto fail; +- +- num_sections = le16(buffer + 6); +- opt_header_size = le16(buffer + 20); +- offset += 24; /* skip file header */ +- +- /* +- * Validate magic number 0x10b or 0x20b, for full details see +- * https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/debug/pe-format#optional-header-standard-fields-image-only +- */ +- if (read_at(fd, buffer, offset, 2) < 0 || +- ((i = le16(buffer)) != 0x10b && i != 0x20b)) +- goto fail; +- +- offset += opt_header_size; +- +- for (i = 0; i < num_sections; i++) { +- if (read_at(fd, buffer, offset + i * 40, 40) < 0) +- goto fail; +- +- /* +- * For full details about the section headers, see +- * https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/debug/pe-format#section-table-section-headers +- */ +- if ((le32(buffer + 36) /* characteristics */ & ~0x600000) /* IMAGE_SCN_ALIGN_32BYTES */ == +- (/* IMAGE_SCN_CNT_INITIALIZED_DATA */ 0x00000040 | +- /* IMAGE_SCN_MEM_READ */ 0x40000000 | +- /* IMAGE_SCN_MEM_WRITE */ 0x80000000)) { +- size_t size = le32(buffer + 16); /* "SizeOfRawData " */ +- size_t pointer = le32(buffer + 20); /* "PointerToRawData " */ +- +- /* +- * Skip the section if either size or pointer is 0, see +- * https://github.com/golang/go/blob/go1.21.0/src/debug/buildinfo/buildinfo.go#L333 +- * for full details. +- * +- * Merely seeing a non-zero size will not actually do, +- * though: he size must be at least `buildInfoSize`, +- * i.e. 32, and we expect a UVarint (at least another +- * byte) _and_ the bytes representing the string, +- * which we expect to start with the letters "go" and +- * continue with the Go version number. +- */ +- if (size < 32 + 1 + 2 + 1 || !pointer) +- continue; +- +- p = malloc(size); +- +- if (!p || read_at(fd, p, pointer, size) < 0) +- goto fail; +- +- /* +- * Look for the build information embedded by Go, see +- * https://github.com/golang/go/blob/go1.21.0/src/debug/buildinfo/buildinfo.go#L165-L175 +- * for full details. +- * +- * Note: Go contains code to enforce alignment along a +- * 16-byte boundary. In practice, no `.exe` has been +- * observed that required any adjustment, therefore +- * this here code skips that logic for simplicity. +- */ +- q = memmem(p, size - 18, "\xff Go buildinf:", 14); +- if (!q) +- goto fail; +- /* +- * Decode the build blob. For full details, see +- * https://github.com/golang/go/blob/go1.21.0/src/debug/buildinfo/buildinfo.go#L177-L191 +- * +- * Note: The `endianness` values observed in practice +- * were always 2, therefore the complex logic to handle +- * any other value is skipped for simplicty. +- */ +- if ((q[14] == 8 || q[14] == 4) && q[15] == 2) { +- /* +- * Only handle a Go version string with fewer +- * than 128 characters, so the Go UVarint at +- * q[32] that indicates the string's length must +- * be only one byte (without the high bit set). +- */ +- if ((q[32] & 0x80) || +- !q[32] || +- (q + 33 + q[32] - p) > (ssize_t)size || +- q[32] + 1 > (ssize_t)go_version_size) +- goto fail; +- res = q[32]; +- memcpy(go_version, q + 33, res); +- go_version[res] = '\0'; +- break; +- } +- } +- } +- +-fail: +- free(p); +- close(fd); +- return res; +-} +- +-void win32_warn_about_git_lfs_on_windows7(int exit_code, const char *argv0) +-{ +- char buffer[128], *git_lfs = NULL; +- const char *p; +- +- /* +- * Git LFS v3.5.1 fails with an Access Violation on Windows 7; That +- * would usually show up as an exit code 0xc0000005. For some reason +- * (probably because at this point, we no longer have the _original_ +- * HANDLE that was returned by `CreateProcess()`) we observe other +- * values like 0xb00 and 0x2 instead. Since the exact exit code +- * seems to be inconsistent, we check for a non-zero exit status. +- */ +- if (exit_code == 0) +- return; +- if (GetVersion() >> 16 > 7601) +- return; /* Warn only on Windows 7 or older */ +- if (!istarts_with(argv0, "git-lfs ") && +- strcasecmp(argv0, "git-lfs")) +- return; +- if (!(git_lfs = locate_in_PATH("git-lfs"))) +- return; +- if (get_go_version(git_lfs, buffer, sizeof(buffer)) > 0 && +- skip_prefix(buffer, "go", &p) && +- versioncmp("1.21.0", p) <= 0) +- warning("This program was built with Go v%s\n" +- "i.e. without support for this Windows version:\n" +- "\n\t%s\n" +- "\n" +- "To work around this, you can download and install a " +- "working version from\n" +- "\n" +- "\thttps://github.com/git-lfs/git-lfs/releases/tag/" +- "v3.4.1\n", +- p, git_lfs); +- free(git_lfs); +-} + + ## config.mak.uname ## + remerge CONFLICT (content): Merge conflict in config.mak.uname + index 4c6562e469..32cc40e3cc 100644 + --- config.mak.uname + +++ config.mak.uname +@@ config.mak.uname: endif + CC = lib/compat/vcbuild/scripts/clink.pl + AR = lib/compat/vcbuild/scripts/lib.pl + CFLAGS = +-<<<<<<< 04a0197a49 (build(deps): bump actions/cache from 5 to 6 (#6303)) + BASIC_CFLAGS = -nologo -I. -Ilib/compat/vcbuild/include -DWIN32 -D_CONSOLE -DHAVE_STRING_H -D_CRT_SECURE_NO_WARNINGS -D_CRT_NONSTDC_NO_DEPRECATE + COMPAT_OBJS = lib/compat/msvc.o lib/compat/winansi.o \ + lib/compat/win32/flush.o \ +@@ config.mak.uname: endif + COMPAT_CFLAGS = -D__USE_MINGW_ACCESS -DDETECT_MSYS_TTY \ + -DENSURE_MSYSTEM_IS_SET="\"$(MSYSTEM)\"" -DMINGW_PREFIX="\"$(patsubst /%,%,$(MINGW_PREFIX))\"" \ + -DNOGDI -DHAVE_STRING_H -Ilib/compat -Ilib/compat/regex -Ilib/compat/win32 -DSTRIP_EXTENSION=\".exe\" +-======= +- BASIC_CFLAGS = -nologo -I. -Icompat/vcbuild/include -DWIN32 -D_CONSOLE -DHAVE_STRING_H -D_CRT_SECURE_NO_WARNINGS -D_CRT_NONSTDC_NO_DEPRECATE +- COMPAT_OBJS = compat/msvc.o compat/winansi.o \ +- compat/win32/flush.o \ +- compat/win32/path-utils.o \ +- compat/win32/pthread.o compat/win32/syslog.o \ +- compat/win32/trace2_win32_process_info.o \ +- compat/win32/dirent.o compat/win32/fscache.o compat/win32/wsl.o +- COMPAT_CFLAGS = -D__USE_MINGW_ACCESS -DDETECT_MSYS_TTY \ +- -DENSURE_MSYSTEM_IS_SET="\"$(MSYSTEM)\"" -DMINGW_PREFIX="\"$(patsubst /%,%,$(MINGW_PREFIX))\"" \ +- -DNOGDI -DHAVE_STRING_H -Icompat -Icompat/regex -Icompat/win32 -DSTRIP_EXTENSION=\".exe\" +->>>>>>> c8dff95af8 (fixup! hash-object: add a >4GB/LLP64 test case using filtered input) + BASIC_LDFLAGS = -IGNORE:4217 -IGNORE:4049 -NOLOGO + # invalidcontinue.obj allows Git's source code to close the same file + # handle twice, or to access the osfhandle of an already-closed stdout +@@ config.mak.uname: endif + EXTLIBS = user32.lib advapi32.lib shell32.lib wininet.lib ws2_32.lib invalidcontinue.obj kernel32.lib ntdll.lib + GITLIBS += git.res + PTHREAD_LIBS = +-<<<<<<< 04a0197a49 (build(deps): bump actions/cache from 5 to 6 (#6303)) + RC = lib/compat/vcbuild/scripts/rc.pl +-======= +- RC = compat/vcbuild/scripts/rc.pl +->>>>>>> c8dff95af8 (fixup! hash-object: add a >4GB/LLP64 test case using filtered input) + lib = + BASIC_CFLAGS += $(vcpkg_inc) $(sdk_includes) $(msvc_includes) + ifndef DEBUG +@@ config.mak.uname: ifeq ($(uname_S),MINGW) + CSPRNG_METHOD = rtlgenrandom + BASIC_LDFLAGS += -municode -Wl,--tsaware + LAZYLOAD_LIBCURL = YesDoThatPlease +-<<<<<<< 04a0197a49 (build(deps): bump actions/cache from 5 to 6 (#6303)) + COMPAT_CFLAGS += -DNOGDI -Ilib/compat -Ilib/compat/win32 + COMPAT_CFLAGS += -DSTRIP_EXTENSION=\".exe\" + COMPAT_OBJS += lib/compat/mingw.o lib/compat/winansi.o \ +@@ config.mak.uname: ifeq ($(uname_S),MINGW) + lib/compat/win32/path-utils.o \ + lib/compat/win32/pthread.o lib/compat/win32/syslog.o \ + lib/compat/win32/dirent.o lib/compat/win32/fscache.o lib/compat/win32/wsl.o +-======= +- COMPAT_CFLAGS += -DNOGDI -Icompat -Icompat/win32 +- COMPAT_CFLAGS += -DSTRIP_EXTENSION=\".exe\" +- COMPAT_OBJS += compat/mingw.o compat/winansi.o \ +- compat/win32/trace2_win32_process_info.o \ +- compat/win32/flush.o \ +- compat/win32/path-utils.o \ +- compat/win32/pthread.o compat/win32/syslog.o \ +- compat/win32/dirent.o compat/win32/fscache.o compat/win32/wsl.o +->>>>>>> c8dff95af8 (fixup! hash-object: add a >4GB/LLP64 test case using filtered input) + BASIC_CFLAGS += -DWIN32 + EXTLIBS += -lws2_32 + GITLIBS += git.res + + ## contrib/buildsystems/CMakeLists.txt ## + remerge CONFLICT (content): Merge conflict in contrib/buildsystems/CMakeLists.txt + index 74d71f51c7..e95bddbc82 100644 + --- contrib/buildsystems/CMakeLists.txt + +++ contrib/buildsystems/CMakeLists.txt +@@ contrib/buildsystems/CMakeLists.txt: if(NOT DEFINED CMAKE_EXPORT_COMPILE_COMMANDS) + endif() + + if(USE_VCPKG) +-<<<<<<< 04a0197a49 (build(deps): bump actions/cache from 5 to 6 (#6303)) + set(VCPKG_DIR "${CMAKE_SOURCE_DIR}/lib/compat/vcbuild/vcpkg") +-======= +- set(VCPKG_DIR "${CMAKE_SOURCE_DIR}/compat/vcbuild/vcpkg") +->>>>>>> c8dff95af8 (fixup! hash-object: add a >4GB/LLP64 test case using filtered input) + message("WIN32: ${WIN32}") # show its underlying text values + message("VCPKG_DIR: ${VCPKG_DIR}") + message("VCPKG_ARCH: ${VCPKG_ARCH}") # maybe unset +@@ contrib/buildsystems/CMakeLists.txt: if(USE_VCPKG) + message("ENV(CMAKE_EXPORT_COMPILE_COMMANDS): $ENV{CMAKE_EXPORT_COMPILE_COMMANDS}") + if(NOT EXISTS ${VCPKG_DIR}) + message("Initializing vcpkg and building the Git's dependencies (this will take a while...)") +-<<<<<<< 04a0197a49 (build(deps): bump actions/cache from 5 to 6 (#6303)) + execute_process(COMMAND ${CMAKE_SOURCE_DIR}/lib/compat/vcbuild/vcpkg_install.bat ${VCPKG_ARCH}) +-======= +- execute_process(COMMAND ${CMAKE_SOURCE_DIR}/compat/vcbuild/vcpkg_install.bat ${VCPKG_ARCH}) +->>>>>>> c8dff95af8 (fixup! hash-object: add a >4GB/LLP64 test case using filtered input) + endif() + if(NOT EXISTS ${VCPKG_ARCH}) + message("VCPKG_ARCH: unset, using 'x64-windows'") +@@ contrib/buildsystems/CMakeLists.txt: endif() + + #default behaviour + include_directories(${CMAKE_SOURCE_DIR}) +-<<<<<<< 04a0197a49 (build(deps): bump actions/cache from 5 to 6 (#6303)) + include_directories(${CMAKE_SOURCE_DIR}/lib) +-======= +->>>>>>> c8dff95af8 (fixup! hash-object: add a >4GB/LLP64 test case using filtered input) + + # When cross-compiling, define HOST_CPU as the canonical name of the CPU on + # which the built Git will run (for instance "x86_64"). +@@ contrib/buildsystems/CMakeLists.txt: if(CMAKE_SYSTEM_NAME STREQUAL "Windows") + add_compile_definitions(ENSURE_MSYSTEM_IS_SET="MINGW32" MINGW_PREFIX="mingw32") + endif() + list(APPEND compat_SOURCES +-<<<<<<< 04a0197a49 (build(deps): bump actions/cache from 5 to 6 (#6303)) + lib/compat/mingw.c + lib/compat/winansi.c + lib/compat/win32/flush.c +@@ contrib/buildsystems/CMakeLists.txt: if(CMAKE_SYSTEM_NAME STREQUAL "Windows") + lib/compat/win32/wsl.c + lib/compat/strdup.c + lib/compat/win32/fscache.c) +-======= +- compat/mingw.c +- compat/winansi.c +- compat/win32/flush.c +- compat/win32/path-utils.c +- compat/win32/pthread.c +- compat/win32mmap.c +- compat/win32/syslog.c +- compat/win32/trace2_win32_process_info.c +- compat/win32/dirent.c +- compat/win32/wsl.c +- compat/strdup.c +- compat/win32/fscache.c) +->>>>>>> c8dff95af8 (fixup! hash-object: add a >4GB/LLP64 test case using filtered input) + set(NO_UNIX_SOCKETS 1) - reftable_set_alloc(malloc, realloc, free); + elseif(CMAKE_SYSTEM_NAME STREQUAL "Linux") +@@ contrib/buildsystems/CMakeLists.txt: if(WIN32) + message(FATAL_ERROR "Unhandled compiler: ${CMAKE_C_COMPILER_ID}") + endif() -+ reftable_set_alloc(malloc, realloc, free); -+ - refs_compute_filesystem_location(gitdir, payload, &is_worktree, &refdir, - &ref_common_dir); +-<<<<<<< 04a0197a49 (build(deps): bump actions/cache from 5 to 6 (#6303)) + add_executable(headless-git ${CMAKE_SOURCE_DIR}/lib/compat/win32/headless.c) +-======= +- add_executable(headless-git ${CMAKE_SOURCE_DIR}/compat/win32/headless.c) +->>>>>>> c8dff95af8 (fixup! hash-object: add a >4GB/LLP64 test case using filtered input) + list(APPEND PROGRAMS_BUILT headless-git) + if(CMAKE_C_COMPILER_ID STREQUAL "GNU" OR CMAKE_C_COMPILER_ID STREQUAL "Clang") + target_link_options(headless-git PUBLIC -municode -Wl,-subsystem,windows) +@@ contrib/buildsystems/CMakeLists.txt: string(REPLACE "@USE_LIBPCRE2@" "" git_build_options "${git_build_options}") + string(REPLACE "@WITH_BREAKING_CHANGES@" "" git_build_options "${git_build_options}") + string(REPLACE "@X@" "${EXE_EXTENSION}" git_build_options "${git_build_options}") + if(USE_VCPKG) +-<<<<<<< 04a0197a49 (build(deps): bump actions/cache from 5 to 6 (#6303)) + string(APPEND git_build_options "PATH=\"$PATH:$TEST_DIRECTORY/../lib/compat/vcbuild/vcpkg/installed/${VCPKG_ARCH}/bin\"\n") +-======= +- string(APPEND git_build_options "PATH=\"$PATH:$TEST_DIRECTORY/../compat/vcbuild/vcpkg/installed/${VCPKG_ARCH}/bin\"\n") +->>>>>>> c8dff95af8 (fixup! hash-object: add a >4GB/LLP64 test case using filtered input) + endif() + file(WRITE ${CMAKE_BINARY_DIR}/GIT-BUILD-OPTIONS ${git_build_options}) + ## lib/compat/vcbuild/README ## + remerge CONFLICT (content): Merge conflict in lib/compat/vcbuild/README + index 75899ec8de..2531650b18 100644 + --- lib/compat/vcbuild/README + +++ lib/compat/vcbuild/README +@@ lib/compat/vcbuild/README: The Steps to Build Git with VS2015 or VS2017 from the command line. + Prompt or from an SDK bash window: + + $ cd <repo_root> +-<<<<<<< 04a0197a49 (build(deps): bump actions/cache from 5 to 6 (#6303)):lib/compat/vcbuild/README + $ ./lib/compat/vcbuild/vcpkg_install.bat x64-windows + + or + + $ ./lib/compat/vcbuild/vcpkg_install.bat arm64-windows +-======= +- $ ./compat/vcbuild/vcpkg_install.bat x64-windows +- +- or +- +- $ ./compat/vcbuild/vcpkg_install.bat arm64-windows +->>>>>>> c8dff95af8 (fixup! hash-object: add a >4GB/LLP64 test case using filtered input):compat/vcbuild/README + + The vcpkg tools and all of the third-party sources will be installed + in this folder: + + ## lib/git-compat-util.h ## + remerge CONFLICT (content): Merge conflict in lib/git-compat-util.h + index 8fabf73277..d4ce96a532 100644 + --- lib/git-compat-util.h + +++ lib/git-compat-util.h +@@ lib/git-compat-util.h: struct fscache; + #ifndef enable_fscache + #define enable_fscache(x) /* noop */ + #endif +-<<<<<<< 04a0197a49 (build(deps): bump actions/cache from 5 to 6 (#6303)):lib/git-compat-util.h + #ifndef flush_fscache + #define flush_fscache() /* noop */ + #endif +-======= +->>>>>>> c8dff95af8 (fixup! hash-object: add a >4GB/LLP64 test case using filtered input):git-compat-util.h + + #ifndef disable_fscache + #define disable_fscache() /* noop */ + + ## lib/send-pack.c ## + remerge CONFLICT (content): Merge conflict in lib/send-pack.c + index 58720b1d44..0d3a0d330c 100644 + --- lib/send-pack.c + +++ lib/send-pack.c +@@ lib/send-pack.c: int send_pack(struct repository *r, + allow_deleting_refs = 1; + if (server_supports("ofs-delta")) + args->use_ofs_delta = 1; +-<<<<<<< 04a0197a49 (build(deps): bump actions/cache from 5 to 6 (#6303)):lib/send-pack.c + if (server_supports("no-ref-delta")) + args->no_ref_delta = 1; +-======= +->>>>>>> c8dff95af8 (fixup! hash-object: add a >4GB/LLP64 test case using filtered input):send-pack.c + use_sideband = use_sideband && server_supports("side-band-64k"); + if (server_supports("quiet")) + quiet_supported = 1; + + ## meson.build ## + remerge CONFLICT (content): Merge conflict in meson.build + index ee152c6533..d8c56a0c82 100644 + --- meson.build + +++ meson.build +@@ meson.build: if host_machine.system() == 'cygwin' + ] + elif host_machine.system() == 'windows' + compat_sources += [ +-<<<<<<< 04a0197a49 (build(deps): bump actions/cache from 5 to 6 (#6303)) + 'lib/compat/winansi.c', + 'lib/compat/win32/dirent.c', + 'lib/compat/win32/flush.c', +@@ meson.build: elif host_machine.system() == 'windows' + 'lib/compat/win32/syslog.c', + 'lib/compat/win32/wsl.c', + 'lib/compat/win32mmap.c', +-======= +- 'compat/winansi.c', +- 'compat/win32/dirent.c', +- 'compat/win32/flush.c', +- 'compat/win32/fscache.c', +- 'compat/win32/path-utils.c', +- 'compat/win32/pthread.c', +- 'compat/win32/syslog.c', +- 'compat/win32/wsl.c', +- 'compat/win32mmap.c', +->>>>>>> c8dff95af8 (fixup! hash-object: add a >4GB/LLP64 test case using filtered input) + ] + + libgit_c_args += [ + + ## meson_options.txt ## + remerge CONFLICT (content): Merge conflict in meson_options.txt + index b845ca2835..427697f5f7 100644 + --- meson_options.txt + +++ meson_options.txt +@@ meson_options.txt: option('runtime_prefix', type: 'boolean', value: false, + description: 'Resolve ancillary tooling and support files relative to the location of the runtime binary instead of hard-coding them into the binary.') + option('sane_tool_path', type: 'array', value: [], + description: 'An array of paths to pick up tools from in case the normal tools are broken or lacking.') +-<<<<<<< 04a0197a49 (build(deps): bump actions/cache from 5 to 6 (#6303)) + option('nanosec', type: 'boolean', value: false, + description: 'Care about sub-second file mtimes and ctimes.') +-======= +->>>>>>> c8dff95af8 (fixup! hash-object: add a >4GB/LLP64 test case using filtered input) + option('msystem', type: 'string', value: '', + description: 'Fall-back on Windows when MSYSTEM is not set.') + option('mingw_prefix', type: 'string', value: '', + + ## odb/source-files.c (deleted) ## + remerge CONFLICT (modify/delete): odb/source-files.c deleted in 04a0197a49 (build(deps): bump actions/cache from 5 to 6 (#6303)) and modified in c8dff95af8 (fixup! hash-object: add a >4GB/LLP64 test case using filtered input). Version c8dff95af8 (fixup! hash-object: add a >4GB/LLP64 test case using filtered input) of odb/source-files.c left in tree. + index 3b1261eba9..0000000000 + --- odb/source-files.c + +++ /dev/null +@@ +-#include "git-compat-util.h" +-#include "abspath.h" +-#include "chdir-notify.h" +-#include "gettext.h" +-#include "lockfile.h" +-#include "object-file.h" +-#include "odb.h" +-#include "odb/source.h" +-#include "odb/source-files.h" +-#include "odb/source-loose.h" +-#include "packfile.h" +-#include "strbuf.h" +-#include "write-or-die.h" +- +-static void odb_source_files_reparent(const char *name UNUSED, +- const char *old_cwd, +- const char *new_cwd, +- void *cb_data) +-{ +- struct odb_source_files *files = cb_data; +- char *path = reparent_relative_path(old_cwd, new_cwd, +- files->base.path); +- free(files->base.path); +- files->base.path = path; +-} +- +-static void odb_source_files_free(struct odb_source *source) +-{ +- struct odb_source_files *files = odb_source_files_downcast(source); +- chdir_notify_unregister(NULL, odb_source_files_reparent, files); +- odb_source_free(&files->loose->base); +- packfile_store_free(files->packed); +- odb_source_release(&files->base); +- free(files); +-} +- +-static void odb_source_files_close(struct odb_source *source) +-{ +- struct odb_source_files *files = odb_source_files_downcast(source); +- odb_source_close(&files->loose->base); +- packfile_store_close(files->packed); +-} +- +-static void odb_source_files_reprepare(struct odb_source *source) +-{ +- struct odb_source_files *files = odb_source_files_downcast(source); +- odb_source_reprepare(&files->loose->base); +- packfile_store_reprepare(files->packed); +-} +- +-static int odb_source_files_read_object_info(struct odb_source *source, +- const struct object_id *oid, +- struct object_info *oi, +- enum object_info_flags flags) +-{ +- struct odb_source_files *files = odb_source_files_downcast(source); +- +- if (!packfile_store_read_object_info(files->packed, oid, oi, flags) || +- !odb_source_read_object_info(&files->loose->base, oid, oi, flags)) +- return 0; +- +- return -1; +-} +- +-static int odb_source_files_read_object_stream(struct odb_read_stream **out, +- struct odb_source *source, +- const struct object_id *oid) +-{ +- struct odb_source_files *files = odb_source_files_downcast(source); +- if (!packfile_store_read_object_stream(out, files->packed, oid) || +- !odb_source_read_object_stream(out, &files->loose->base, oid)) +- return 0; +- return -1; +-} +- +-static int odb_source_files_for_each_object(struct odb_source *source, +- const struct object_info *request, +- odb_for_each_object_cb cb, +- void *cb_data, +- const struct odb_for_each_object_options *opts) +-{ +- struct odb_source_files *files = odb_source_files_downcast(source); +- int ret; +- +- if (!(opts->flags & ODB_FOR_EACH_OBJECT_PROMISOR_ONLY)) { +- ret = odb_source_for_each_object(&files->loose->base, request, cb, cb_data, opts); +- if (ret) +- return ret; +- } +- +- ret = packfile_store_for_each_object(files->packed, request, cb, cb_data, opts); +- if (ret) +- return ret; +- +- return 0; +-} +- +-static int odb_source_files_count_objects(struct odb_source *source, +- enum odb_count_objects_flags flags, +- unsigned long *out) +-{ +- struct odb_source_files *files = odb_source_files_downcast(source); +- unsigned long count; +- int ret; +- +- ret = packfile_store_count_objects(files->packed, flags, &count); +- if (ret < 0) +- goto out; +- +- if (!(flags & ODB_COUNT_OBJECTS_APPROXIMATE)) { +- unsigned long loose_count; +- +- ret = odb_source_count_objects(&files->loose->base, flags, &loose_count); +- if (ret < 0) +- goto out; +- +- count += loose_count; +- } +- +- *out = count; +- ret = 0; +- +-out: +- return ret; +-} +- +-static int odb_source_files_find_abbrev_len(struct odb_source *source, +- const struct object_id *oid, +- unsigned min_len, +- unsigned *out) +-{ +- struct odb_source_files *files = odb_source_files_downcast(source); +- unsigned len = min_len; +- int ret; +- +- ret = packfile_store_find_abbrev_len(files->packed, oid, len, &len); +- if (ret < 0) +- goto out; +- +- ret = odb_source_find_abbrev_len(&files->loose->base, oid, len, &len); +- if (ret < 0) +- goto out; +- +- *out = len; +- ret = 0; +- +-out: +- return ret; +-} +- +-static int odb_source_files_freshen_object(struct odb_source *source, +- const struct object_id *oid) +-{ +- struct odb_source_files *files = odb_source_files_downcast(source); +- if (packfile_store_freshen_object(files->packed, oid) || +- odb_source_freshen_object(&files->loose->base, oid)) +- return 1; +- return 0; +-} +- +-static int odb_source_files_write_object(struct odb_source *source, +- const void *buf, size_t len, +- enum object_type type, +- struct object_id *oid, +- struct object_id *compat_oid, +- enum odb_write_object_flags flags) +-{ +- struct odb_source_files *files = odb_source_files_downcast(source); +- return odb_source_write_object(&files->loose->base, buf, len, type, +- oid, compat_oid, flags); +-} +- +-static int odb_source_files_write_object_stream(struct odb_source *source, +- struct odb_write_stream *stream, +- size_t len, +- struct object_id *oid) +-{ +- struct odb_source_files *files = odb_source_files_downcast(source); +- return odb_source_write_object_stream(&files->loose->base, stream, len, oid); +-} +- +-static int odb_source_files_begin_transaction(struct odb_source *source, +- struct odb_transaction **out) +-{ +- struct odb_transaction *tx = odb_transaction_files_begin(source); +- if (!tx) +- return -1; +- *out = tx; +- return 0; +-} +- +-static int odb_source_files_read_alternates(struct odb_source *source, +- struct strvec *out) +-{ +- struct strbuf buf = STRBUF_INIT; +- char *path; +- +- path = xstrfmt("%s/info/alternates", source->path); +- if (strbuf_read_file(&buf, path, 1024) < 0) { +- warn_on_fopen_errors(path); +- free(path); +- return 0; +- } +- parse_alternates(buf.buf, '\n', source->path, out); +- +- strbuf_release(&buf); +- free(path); +- return 0; +-} +- +-static int odb_source_files_write_alternate(struct odb_source *source, +- const char *alternate) +-{ +- struct lock_file lock = LOCK_INIT; +- char *path = xstrfmt("%s/%s", source->path, "info/alternates"); +- FILE *in, *out; +- int found = 0; +- int ret; +- +- hold_lock_file_for_update(&lock, path, LOCK_DIE_ON_ERROR); +- out = fdopen_lock_file(&lock, "w"); +- if (!out) { +- ret = error_errno(_("unable to fdopen alternates lockfile")); +- goto out; +- } +- +- in = fopen(path, "r"); +- if (in) { +- struct strbuf line = STRBUF_INIT; +- +- while (strbuf_getline(&line, in) != EOF) { +- if (!strcmp(alternate, line.buf)) { +- found = 1; +- break; +- } +- fprintf_or_die(out, "%s\n", line.buf); +- } +- +- strbuf_release(&line); +- fclose(in); +- } else if (errno != ENOENT) { +- ret = error_errno(_("unable to read alternates file")); +- goto out; +- } +- +- if (found) { +- rollback_lock_file(&lock); +- } else { +- fprintf_or_die(out, "%s\n", alternate); +- if (commit_lock_file(&lock)) { +- ret = error_errno(_("unable to move new alternates file into place")); +- goto out; +- } +- } +- +- ret = 0; +- +-out: +- free(path); +- return ret; +-} +- +-struct odb_source_files *odb_source_files_new(struct object_database *odb, +- const char *path, +- bool local) +-{ +- struct odb_source_files *files; +- +- CALLOC_ARRAY(files, 1); +- odb_source_init(&files->base, odb, ODB_SOURCE_FILES, path, local); +- files->loose = odb_source_loose_new(odb, path, local); +- files->packed = packfile_store_new(&files->base); +- +- files->base.free = odb_source_files_free; +- files->base.close = odb_source_files_close; +- files->base.reprepare = odb_source_files_reprepare; +- files->base.read_object_info = odb_source_files_read_object_info; +- files->base.read_object_stream = odb_source_files_read_object_stream; +- files->base.for_each_object = odb_source_files_for_each_object; +- files->base.count_objects = odb_source_files_count_objects; +- files->base.find_abbrev_len = odb_source_files_find_abbrev_len; +- files->base.freshen_object = odb_source_files_freshen_object; +- files->base.write_object = odb_source_files_write_object; +- files->base.write_object_stream = odb_source_files_write_object_stream; +- files->base.begin_transaction = odb_source_files_begin_transaction; +- files->base.read_alternates = odb_source_files_read_alternates; +- files->base.write_alternate = odb_source_files_write_alternate; +- +- /* +- * Ideally, we would only ever store absolute paths in the source. This +- * is not (yet) possible though because we access and assume relative +- * paths in the primary ODB source in some user-facing functionality. +- */ +- if (!is_absolute_path(path)) +- chdir_notify_register(NULL, odb_source_files_reparent, files); +- +- return files; +-} + ## t/t1007-hash-object.sh ## + remerge CONFLICT (content): Merge conflict in t/t1007-hash-object.sh + index ebe7913fa3..463b38f990 100755 + --- t/t1007-hash-object.sh + +++ t/t1007-hash-object.sh @@ t/t1007-hash-object.sh: test_expect_success EXPENSIVE,SIZE_T_IS_64BIT \ # This clean filter does nothing, other than excercising the interface. # We ensure that cleaning doesn't mangle large files on 64-bit Windows. +-<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<< 04a0197a49 (build(deps): bump actions/cache from 5 to 6 (#6303)) -test_expect_success EXPENSIVE,SIZE_T_IS_64BIT,!LONG_IS_64BIT \ -+test_expect_success EXPENSIVE,SIZE_T_IS_64BIT \ +-================================ + test_expect_success EXPENSIVE,SIZE_T_IS_64BIT \ +->>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> c8dff95af8 (fixup! hash-object: add a >4GB/LLP64 test case using filtered input) 'hash filtered files over 4GB correctly' ' { test -f big || test-tool genzeros $((5*1024*1024*1024)) >big; } && test_oid large5GB >expect && + + ## t/t1517-outside-repo.sh ## + remerge CONFLICT (content): Merge conflict in t/t1517-outside-repo.sh + index b84aad6a48..efbac29c0e 100755 + --- t/t1517-outside-repo.sh + +++ t/t1517-outside-repo.sh +@@ t/t1517-outside-repo.sh: do + http-backend | http-fetch | http-push | init-db | \ + mktag | p4 | p4.py | pickaxe | remote-ftp | remote-ftps | \ + remote-http | remote-https | replay | send-email | \ +-<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<< 04a0197a49 (build(deps): bump actions/cache from 5 to 6 (#6303)) + sh-i18n--envsubst | shell | show | stage | survey | \ + upload-archive--writer | upload-pack | whatchanged) + h_expect_outcome=expect_failure +@@ t/t1517-outside-repo.sh: do + h_expect_outcome=expect_success + all_expect_outcome=expect_failure + ;; +-================================ +- sh-i18n--envsubst | shell | show | stage | submodule | survey | svn | \ +- upload-archive--writer | upload-pack | web--browse | whatchanged) +- expect_outcome=expect_failure ;; +->>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> c8dff95af8 (fixup! hash-object: add a >4GB/LLP64 test case using filtered input) + *) + h_expect_outcome=expect_success + all_expect_outcome=expect_success + + ## t/t6403-merge-file.sh ## + remerge CONFLICT (content): Merge conflict in t/t6403-merge-file.sh + index f7a2787dbd..bd58e471bc 100755 + --- t/t6403-merge-file.sh + +++ t/t6403-merge-file.sh +@@ t/t6403-merge-file.sh: test_expect_success "expected conflict markers" ' + test_expect_success 'binary files cannot be merged' ' + test_must_fail git merge-file -p \ + orig.txt "$TEST_DIRECTORY"/lib-diff/test-binary-1.png new1.txt 2> merge.err && +-<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<< 04a0197a49 (build(deps): bump actions/cache from 5 to 6 (#6303)) + test_grep "Cannot merge binary files" merge.err +-================================ +- grep "Cannot merge binary files" merge.err +->>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> c8dff95af8 (fixup! hash-object: add a >4GB/LLP64 test case using filtered input) + ' + + test_expect_success 'binary files cannot be merged with --object-id' 'To: fdc4c056cb (Turn
git surveyinto a deprecated shim overgit repo structure(git-for-windows#6268), 2026-07-08) (5af4460075..fdc4c056cb)Statistics
Range-diff (click to expand)
^$false match at end of filegit-<command>for built-insCC = gccgit addissue with NTFS junctions.git/branches/in the templatescontrib/subtreetesttargetwindows.appendAtomically--pic-executablestrbuf_realpath()parse_interpreter()contrib/subtreetests in CI buildsETC_*for MSYS2 environmentsgit.exeto be used instead of the "Git wrapper"errnois set correctly when socket operations failwindows.appendAtomicallyin more casesgit_terminal_promptwith more terminalssymlinkattributegit p4tests.gitfilescast_size_t_to_ulong()helpergit add <file>where <file> traverses an NTFS junction git#2504 from dscho/access-repo-via-junctionparse_interpreter()git#3165 from dscho/increase-allowed-length-of-interpreter-pathcontrib/subtreetest execution to CI builds git#3349 from vdye/feature/ci-subtree-testsunsigned long->size_tconversion to support large files on Windows git#3533 from PhilipOakley/hashliteral_tsafe.directorygit#3791: Various fixes aroundsafe.directorygit-<command>s for built-ins (Skip linking the "dashed"git-<command>s for built-ins git#4252)mingw-w64-git(i.e. regular MSYS2 ecosystem) support (Add fullmingw-w64-git(i.e. regular MSYS2 ecosystem) support git#5971)Truncated; see the full conflict report in the workflow run summary.