With this option, it is possible to require a linear commit history with
the following benefits over the next best option `Rebase+fast-forward`:
The original commits continue existing, with the original signatures
continuing to stay valid instead of being rewritten, there is no merge
commit, and reverting commits becomes easier.
Closes#24906
Replace #28849. Thanks to @yp05327 for the looking into the problem.
Fix#28840
The old behavior of newSignatureFromCommitline is not right. The new
parseSignatureFromCommitLine:
1. never fails
2. only accept one format (if there is any other, it could be easily added)
And add some tests.
## Purpose
This is a refactor toward building an abstraction over managing git
repositories.
Afterwards, it does not matter anymore if they are stored on the local
disk or somewhere remote.
## What this PR changes
We used `git.OpenRepository` everywhere previously.
Now, we should split them into two distinct functions:
Firstly, there are temporary repositories which do not change:
```go
git.OpenRepository(ctx, diskPath)
```
Gitea managed repositories having a record in the database in the
`repository` table are moved into the new package `gitrepo`:
```go
gitrepo.OpenRepository(ctx, repo_model.Repo)
```
Why is `repo_model.Repository` the second parameter instead of file
path?
Because then we can easily adapt our repository storage strategy.
The repositories can be stored locally, however, they could just as well
be stored on a remote server.
## Further changes in other PRs
- A Git Command wrapper on package `gitrepo` could be created. i.e.
`NewCommand(ctx, repo_model.Repository, commands...)`. `git.RunOpts{Dir:
repo.RepoPath()}`, the directory should be empty before invoking this
method and it can be filled in the function only. #28940
- Remove the `RepoPath()`/`WikiPath()` functions to reduce the
possibility of mistakes.
---------
Co-authored-by: delvh <dev.lh@web.de>
This should fix https://github.com/go-gitea/gitea/issues/28927
Technically older versions of Git would support this flag as well, but
per https://github.com/go-gitea/gitea/pull/28466 that's the version
where using it (object-format=sha256) left "experimental" state.
`sha1` is (currently) the default, so older clients should be unaffected
in either case.
Signed-off-by: jolheiser <john.olheiser@gmail.com>
When LFS hooks are present in gitea-repositories, operations like git
push for creating a pull request fail. These repositories are not meant
to include LFS files or git push them, that is handled separately. And
so they should not have LFS hooks.
Installing git-lfs on some systems (like Debian Linux) will
automatically set up /etc/gitconfig to create LFS hooks in repositories.
For most git commands in Gitea this is not a problem, either because
they run on a temporary clone or the git command does not create LFS
hooks.
But one case where this happens is git archive for creating repository
archives. To fix that, add a GIT_CONFIG_NOSYSTEM=1 to disable using the
system configuration for that command.
According to a comment, GIT_CONFIG_NOSYSTEM is not used for all git
commands because the system configuration can be intentionally set up
for Gitea to use.
Resolves#19810, #21148
Nowadays, cache will be used on almost everywhere of Gitea and it cannot
be disabled, otherwise some features will become unaviable.
Then I think we can just remove the option for cache enable. That means
cache cannot be disabled.
But of course, we can still use cache configuration to set how should
Gitea use the cache.
The 4 functions are duplicated, especially as interface methods. I think
we just need to keep `MustID` the only one and remove other 3.
```
MustID(b []byte) ObjectID
MustIDFromString(s string) ObjectID
NewID(b []byte) (ObjectID, error)
NewIDFromString(s string) (ObjectID, error)
```
Introduced the new interfrace method `ComputeHash` which will replace
the interface `HasherInterface`. Now we don't need to keep two
interfaces.
Reintroduced `git.NewIDFromString` and `git.MustIDFromString`. The new
function will detect the hash length to decide which objectformat of it.
If it's 40, then it's SHA1. If it's 64, then it's SHA256. This will be
right if the commitID is a full one. So the parameter should be always a
full commit id.
@AdamMajer Please review.
Update golang.org/x/crypto for CVE-2023-48795 and update other packages.
`go-git` is not updated because it needs time to figure out why some
tests fail.
- Remove `ObjectFormatID`
- Remove function `ObjectFormatFromID`.
- Use `Sha1ObjectFormat` directly but not a pointer because it's an
empty struct.
- Store `ObjectFormatName` in `repository` struct
Refactor Hash interfaces and centralize hash function. This will allow
easier introduction of different hash function later on.
This forms the "no-op" part of the SHA256 enablement patch.
The summary string ends up in the database, and (at least) MySQL &
PostgreSQL require valid UTF8 strings.
Fixes#28178
Co-authored-by: Darrin Smart <darrin@filmlight.ltd.uk>
assert.Fail() will continue to execute the code while assert.FailNow()
not. I thought those uses of assert.Fail() should exit immediately.
PS: perhaps it's a good idea to use
[require](https://pkg.go.dev/github.com/stretchr/testify/require)
somewhere because the assert package's default behavior does not exit
when an error occurs, which makes it difficult to find the root error
reason.
This pull request is a minor code cleanup.
From the Go specification (https://go.dev/ref/spec#For_range):
> "1. For a nil slice, the number of iterations is 0."
> "3. If the map is nil, the number of iterations is 0."
`len` returns 0 if the slice or map is nil
(https://pkg.go.dev/builtin#len). Therefore, checking `len(v) > 0`
before a loop is unnecessary.
---
At the time of writing this pull request, there wasn't a lint rule that
catches these issues. The closest I could find is
https://staticcheck.dev/docs/checks/#S103
Signed-off-by: Eng Zer Jun <engzerjun@gmail.com>
Closes#26329
This PR adds the ability to ignore revisions specified in the
`.git-blame-ignore-revs` file in the root of the repository.
![grafik](https://github.com/go-gitea/gitea/assets/1666336/9e91be0c-6e9c-431c-bbe9-5f80154251c8)
The banner is displayed in this case. I intentionally did not add a UI
way to bypass the ignore file (same behaviour as Github) but you can add
`?bypass-blame-ignore=true` to the url manually.
---------
Co-authored-by: wxiaoguang <wxiaoguang@gmail.com>
From the Go specification:
> "1. For a nil slice, the number of iterations is 0."
https://go.dev/ref/spec#For_range
Therefore, an additional nil check for before the loop is unnecessary.
Signed-off-by: Eng Zer Jun <engzerjun@gmail.com>
Hi,
We'd like to add merge files files to GetCommitFileStatus fucntions so
API returns the list of all the files associated to a merged pull
request commit, like GitHub API does.
The list of affectedFiles for an API commit is fetched from toCommit()
function in routers/api/v1/repo/commits.go, and API was returning no
file in case of a pull request with no conflict, or just files
associated to the confict resolution, but NOT the full list of merged
files.
This would lead to situations where a CI polling a repo for changes
could miss some file changes due to API returning an empty / partial
list in case of such merged pull requests. (Hope this makes sense :) )
NOTE: I'd like to add a unittest in
integrations/api_repo_git_commits_test.go but failed to understand how
to add my own test bare repo so I can make a test on a merged pull
request commit to check for affectedFiles.
Is there a merged pull request in there that I could use maybe?
Could someone please direct me to the relevant ressources with
informations on how to do that please?
Thanks for your time,
Laurent.
---------
Co-authored-by: Thomas Desveaux <desveaux.thomas@gmail.com>
Close stdout correctly for "git blame", otherwise the failed "git blame"
would case the request hanging forever.
And "os.Stderr" should never (seldom) be used as git command's stderr
Fix#26064
Some git commands should use parent context, otherwise it would exit too
early (by the default timeout, 10m), and the "cmd.Wait" waits till the
pipes are closed.
Fixes#26270.
Co-Author: @wxiaoguang
Thanks @lunny for providing this solution
As
https://github.com/go-gitea/gitea/issues/26270#issuecomment-1661695151
said, at present we cannot get the names of changed files correctly when
the `OldCommitID` is `EmptySHA`. In this PR, the `GetCommitFilesChanged`
method is added and will be used to get the changed files by commit ID.
References:
- https://stackoverflow.com/a/424142
---------
Co-authored-by: wxiaoguang <wxiaoguang@gmail.com>
The `FileBlame` function looks strange, it has `revision` as argument
but doesn't use it.
Since the function never be used, I think we could just remove it.
If anyone thinks it should be kept, please help fix `revision`.
Co-authored-by: Giteabot <teabot@gitea.io>
To record which command is slow, this PR adds a debug log for slow git
operations.
---------
Co-authored-by: Lauris BH <lauris@nix.lv>
Co-authored-by: delvh <dev.lh@web.de>
This PR replaces all string refName as a type `git.RefName` to make the
code more maintainable.
Fix#15367
Replaces #23070
It also fixed a bug that tags are not sync because `git remote --prune
origin` will not remove local tags if remote removed.
We in fact should use `git fetch --prune --tags origin` but not `git
remote update origin` to do the sync.
Some answer from ChatGPT as ref.
> If the git fetch --prune --tags command is not working as expected,
there could be a few reasons why. Here are a few things to check:
>
>Make sure that you have the latest version of Git installed on your
system. You can check the version by running git --version in your
terminal. If you have an outdated version, try updating Git and see if
that resolves the issue.
>
>Check that your Git repository is properly configured to track the
remote repository's tags. You can check this by running git config
--get-all remote.origin.fetch and verifying that it includes
+refs/tags/*:refs/tags/*. If it does not, you can add it by running git
config --add remote.origin.fetch "+refs/tags/*:refs/tags/*".
>
>Verify that the tags you are trying to prune actually exist on the
remote repository. You can do this by running git ls-remote --tags
origin to list all the tags on the remote repository.
>
>Check if any local tags have been created that match the names of tags
on the remote repository. If so, these local tags may be preventing the
git fetch --prune --tags command from working properly. You can delete
local tags using the git tag -d command.
---------
Co-authored-by: delvh <dev.lh@web.de>
Fix#24896
If users set different languages by `linguist-language`, the `stats` map
could be: `java: 100, Java: 200`.
Language stats are stored as case-insensitive in database and there is a
unique key.
So, the different language names should be merged to one unique name:
`Java: 300`
Close#13454 , Close#23255, Close#14697 (and maybe more related
issues)
Many users have the requirement to customize the git config. This PR
introduces an easy way: put the options in Gitea's app.ini
`[git.config]`, then the config options will be applied to git config.
And it can support more flexible default config values, eg: now
`diff.algorithm=histogram` by default. According to:
https://stackoverflow.com/a/32367597/4754037 , `histogram diff` is
efficient and doesn't like to cause server-side problems.
---------
Co-authored-by: silverwind <me@silverwind.io>
Co-authored-by: KN4CK3R <admin@oldschoolhack.me>
Co-authored-by: Giteabot <teabot@gitea.io>
## ⚠️ Breaking
The `log.<mode>.<logger>` style config has been dropped. If you used it,
please check the new config manual & app.example.ini to make your
instance output logs as expected.
Although many legacy options still work, it's encouraged to upgrade to
the new options.
The SMTP logger is deleted because SMTP is not suitable to collect logs.
If you have manually configured Gitea log options, please confirm the
logger system works as expected after upgrading.
## Description
Close#12082 and maybe more log-related issues, resolve some related
FIXMEs in old code (which seems unfixable before)
Just like rewriting queue #24505 : make code maintainable, clear legacy
bugs, and add the ability to support more writers (eg: JSON, structured
log)
There is a new document (with examples): `logging-config.en-us.md`
This PR is safer than the queue rewriting, because it's just for
logging, it won't break other logic.
## The old problems
The logging system is quite old and difficult to maintain:
* Unclear concepts: Logger, NamedLogger, MultiChannelledLogger,
SubLogger, EventLogger, WriterLogger etc
* Some code is diffuclt to konw whether it is right:
`log.DelNamedLogger("console")` vs `log.DelNamedLogger(log.DEFAULT)` vs
`log.DelLogger("console")`
* The old system heavily depends on ini config system, it's difficult to
create new logger for different purpose, and it's very fragile.
* The "color" trick is difficult to use and read, many colors are
unnecessary, and in the future structured log could help
* It's difficult to add other log formats, eg: JSON format
* The log outputer doesn't have full control of its goroutine, it's
difficult to make outputer have advanced behaviors
* The logs could be lost in some cases: eg: no Fatal error when using
CLI.
* Config options are passed by JSON, which is quite fragile.
* INI package makes the KEY in `[log]` section visible in `[log.sub1]`
and `[log.sub1.subA]`, this behavior is quite fragile and would cause
more unclear problems, and there is no strong requirement to support
`log.<mode>.<logger>` syntax.
## The new design
See `logger.go` for documents.
## Screenshot
<details>
![image](https://github.com/go-gitea/gitea/assets/2114189/4462d713-ba39-41f5-bb08-de912e67e1ff)
![image](https://github.com/go-gitea/gitea/assets/2114189/b188035e-f691-428b-8b2d-ff7b2199b2f9)
![image](https://github.com/go-gitea/gitea/assets/2114189/132e9745-1c3b-4e00-9e0d-15eaea495dee)
</details>
## TODO
* [x] add some new tests
* [x] fix some tests
* [x] test some sub-commands (manually ....)
---------
Co-authored-by: Jason Song <i@wolfogre.com>
Co-authored-by: delvh <dev.lh@web.de>
Co-authored-by: Giteabot <teabot@gitea.io>
Due to #24409 , we can now specify '--not' when getting all commits from
a repo to exclude commits from a different branch.
When I wrote that PR, I forgot to also update the code that counts the
number of commits in the repo. So now, if the --not option is used, it
may return too many commits, which can indicate that another page of
data is available when it is not.
This PR passes --not to the commands that count the number of commits in
a repo
For my specific use case, I'd like to get all commits that are on one
branch but NOT on the other branch.
For instance, I'd like to get all the commits on `Branch1` that are not
also on `master` (I.e. all commits that were made after `Branch1` was
created).
This PR adds a `not` query param that gets passed down to the `git log`
command to allow the user to exclude items from `GetAllCommits`.
See [git
documentation](https://git-scm.com/docs/git-log#Documentation/git-log.txt---not)
---------
Co-authored-by: Giteabot <teabot@gitea.io>
Close#7570
1. Clearly define the wiki path behaviors, see
`services/wiki/wiki_path.go` and tests
2. Keep compatibility with old contents
3. Allow to use dashes in titles, eg: "2000-01-02 Meeting record"
4. Add a "Pages" link in the dropdown, otherwise users can't go to the
Pages page easily.
5. Add a "View original git file" link in the Pages list, even if some
file names are broken, users still have a chance to edit or remove it,
without cloning the wiki repo to local.
6. Fix 500 error when the name contains prefix spaces.
This PR also introduces the ability to support sub-directories, but it
can't be done at the moment due to there are a lot of legacy wiki data,
which use "%2F" in file names.
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/2114189/232239004-3359d7b9-7bf3-4ff3-8446-bfb0e79645dd.png)
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/2114189/232239020-74b92c72-bf73-4377-a319-1c85609f82b1.png)
Co-authored-by: Giteabot <teabot@gitea.io>
Remove the misbehaving function and call
Repository.GetFilesChangedBetween instead.
Fixes#23919
---
~~_TODO_ test this~~ `Repository.getFilesChanged` seems to be only used
by Gitea Actions, but a similar function already exists
**Update** I tested this change and the issue is gone.
Reference:
https://github.com/go-gitea/gitea/issues/22578#issuecomment-1444180053
Credits to @tdesveaux , thank you very much for catching the problem. If
you'd like to open a PR, feel free to replace this one.
Git reports fatal errors for ambiguous arguments:
```
fatal: ambiguous argument 'refs/a...refs/b': unknown revision or path not in the working tree.
Use '--' to separate paths from revisions, like this:
'git <command> [<revision>...] -- [<file>...]'
```
So the `--` separator is necessary in some cases.
Currently gitea shows no commit information for files starting with a
colon.
[I set up a minimal repro repository that reproduces this error once
it's migrated on gitea](https://github.com/kbolashev/colon-test)
<img width="1209" alt="image"
src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/111061261/219326625-0e6d3a86-8b58-4d67-bc24-8a78963f36b9.png">
This is happening because the filenames piped to the `git log` command
are written as is, and it doesn't work when you have a colon at the
start of the filename, and you need to escape it.
You can test it locally, if you do
```
mkdir repo
git init
touch :file
git add . && git commit -m "Add file with colon"
git log -- :file
```
git log returns nothing. However, if you do `git log -- "\:file"`, it
will show the commit with the file change.
This PR escapes the starting colons in paths in the `LogNameStatusRepo`
function, making gitea return commit info about the file with the bad
filename.
<img width="1209" alt="image"
src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/111061261/219328299-46451246-4006-45e3-89b1-c244635ded23.png">
This error shows up only with files starting with colon, anywhere else
in filename is ok. Dashes at the beginning also seem to be working.
I don't know gitea internals well enough to know where else this error
can pop up, so I'm keeping this PR small as suggested by your
contributor guide
This PR adds support for reflogs on all repositories. It does this by
adding a global configuration entry.
Implements #14865
---------
Signed-off-by: Philip Peterson <philip.c.peterson@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Lunny Xiao <xiaolunwen@gmail.com>
When the base repository contains multiple branches with the same
commits as the base branch, pull requests can show a long list of
commits already in the base branch as having been added.
What this is supposed to do is exclude commits already in the base
branch. But the mechansim to do so assumed a commit only exists in a
single branch. Now use `git rev-list A B --not branchName` instead of
filtering commits afterwards.
The logic to detect if there was a force push also was wrong for
multiple branches. If the old commit existed in any branch in the base
repository it would assume there was no force push. Instead check if the
old commit is an ancestor of the new commit.
Follow #22568
* Remove unnecessary ToTrustedCmdArgs calls
* the FAQ in #22678
* Quote: When using ToTrustedCmdArgs, the code will be very complex (see
the changes for examples). Then developers and reviewers can know that
something might be unreasonable.
* The `signArg` couldn't be empty, it's either `-S{keyID}` or
`--no-gpg-sign`.
* Use `signKeyID` instead, add comment "empty for no-sign, non-empty to
sign"
* 5-line code could be extracted to a common `NewGitCommandCommit()` to
handle the `signKeyID`, but I think it's not a must, current code is
clear enough.
The merge and update branch code was previously a little tangled and had
some very long functions. The functions were not very clear in their
reasoning and there were deficiencies in their logging and at least one
bug in the handling of LFS for update by rebase.
This PR substantially refactors this code and splits things out to into
separate functions. It also attempts to tidy up the calls by wrapping
things in "context"s. There are also attempts to improve logging when
there are errors.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net>
---------
Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net>
Co-authored-by: techknowlogick <techknowlogick@gitea.io>
Co-authored-by: delvh <dev.lh@web.de>
The code for GetFilesChangedBetween uses `git diff --name-only
base..head` to get the names of files changed between base and head
however this forgets that git will escape certain values.
This PR simply switches to use `-z` which has the `NUL` character as the
separator.
Ref https://github.com/go-gitea/gitea/pull/22568#discussion_r1123138096
Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net>
Co-authored-by: techknowlogick <techknowlogick@gitea.io>
This arose out of #22451; it seems we are checking using non-global
settings to see if a config value is set, in order to decide whether to
call another global(-indeed) configuration command. This PR changes it
so that both the check and the set are for global configuration.
minio/sha256-simd provides additional acceleration for SHA256 using
AVX512, SHA Extensions for x86 and ARM64 for ARM.
It provides a drop-in replacement for crypto/sha256 and if the
extensions are not available it falls back to standard crypto/sha256.
---------
Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net>
Co-authored-by: John Olheiser <john.olheiser@gmail.com>
Close #23027
`git commit` message option _only_ supports 4 formats (well, only ....):
* `"commit", "-m", msg`
* `"commit", "-m{msg}"` (no space)
* `"commit", "--message", msg`
* `"commit", "--message={msg}"`
The long format with `=` is the best choice, and it's documented in `man
git-commit`:
`-m <msg>, --message=<msg> ...`
ps: I would suggest always use long format option for git command, as
much as possible.
Co-authored-by: Lunny Xiao <xiaolunwen@gmail.com>
!fixup https://github.com/go-gitea/gitea/pull/22177
The only place this function is used so far is in
findReadmeFileInEntries(), so the only visible effect of this oversight
was in an obscure README-related corner: if the README was in a
subfolder and was a symlink that pointed up, as in .github/README.md ->
../docs/old/setup.md, the README would fail to render when FollowLinks()
hit the nil ptree. This makes the ptree non-nil and thus repairs it.
This code was copy-pasted at some point. Revisit it to reunify it.
~~Doing that then encouraged simplifying the types of a couple of
related functions.~~
~~As a follow-up, move two helper functions, `isReadmeFile()` and
`isReadmeFileExtension()`, intimately tied to `findReadmeFile()`, in as
package-private.~~
Signed-off-by: Nick Guenther <nick.guenther@polymtl.ca>
Creating a new buffered reader for every part of the blame can miss
lines, as it will read and buffer bytes that the next buffered reader
will not get.
Co-authored-by: Lunny Xiao <xiaolunwen@gmail.com>
During the refactoring of the git module, I found there were some
strange operations. This PR tries to fix 2 of them
1. The empty argument `--` in repo_attribute.go, which was introduced by
#16773. It seems unnecessary because nothing else would be added later.
2. The complex git service logic in repo/http.go.
* Before: the `hasAccess` only allow `service == "upload-pack" ||
service == "receive-pack"`
* After: unrelated code is removed. No need to call ToTrustedCmdArgs
anymore.
Co-authored-by: Lunny Xiao <xiaolunwen@gmail.com>
This PR follows #21535 (and replace #22592)
## Review without space diff
https://github.com/go-gitea/gitea/pull/22678/files?diff=split&w=1
## Purpose of this PR
1. Make git module command completely safe (risky user inputs won't be
passed as argument option anymore)
2. Avoid low-level mistakes like
https://github.com/go-gitea/gitea/pull/22098#discussion_r1045234918
3. Remove deprecated and dirty `CmdArgCheck` function, hide the `CmdArg`
type
4. Simplify code when using git command
## The main idea of this PR
* Move the `git.CmdArg` to the `internal` package, then no other package
except `git` could use it. Then developers could never do
`AddArguments(git.CmdArg(userInput))` any more.
* Introduce `git.ToTrustedCmdArgs`, it's for user-provided and already
trusted arguments. It's only used in a few cases, for example: use git
arguments from config file, help unit test with some arguments.
* Introduce `AddOptionValues` and `AddOptionFormat`, they make code more
clear and simple:
* Before: `AddArguments("-m").AddDynamicArguments(message)`
* After: `AddOptionValues("-m", message)`
* -
* Before: `AddArguments(git.CmdArg(fmt.Sprintf("--author='%s <%s>'",
sig.Name, sig.Email)))`
* After: `AddOptionFormat("--author='%s <%s>'", sig.Name, sig.Email)`
## FAQ
### Why these changes were not done in #21535 ?
#21535 is mainly a search&replace, it did its best to not change too
much logic.
Making the framework better needs a lot of changes, so this separate PR
is needed as the second step.
### The naming of `AddOptionXxx`
According to git's manual, the `--xxx` part is called `option`.
### How can it guarantee that `internal.CmdArg` won't be not misused?
Go's specification guarantees that. Trying to access other package's
internal package causes compilation error.
And, `golangci-lint` also denies the git/internal package. Only the
`git/command.go` can use it carefully.
### There is still a `ToTrustedCmdArgs`, will it still allow developers
to make mistakes and pass untrusted arguments?
Generally speaking, no. Because when using `ToTrustedCmdArgs`, the code
will be very complex (see the changes for examples). Then developers and
reviewers can know that something might be unreasonable.
### Why there was a `CmdArgCheck` and why it's removed?
At the moment of #21535, to reduce unnecessary changes, `CmdArgCheck`
was introduced as a hacky patch. Now, almost all code could be written
as `cmd := NewCommand(); cmd.AddXxx(...)`, then there is no need for
`CmdArgCheck` anymore.
### Why many codes for `signArg == ""` is deleted?
Because in the old code, `signArg` could never be empty string, it's
either `-S[key-id]` or `--no-gpg-sign`. So the `signArg == ""` is just
dead code.
---------
Co-authored-by: Lunny Xiao <xiaolunwen@gmail.com>
- Remove code that isn't being used.
Found this is my stash from a few weeks ago, not sure how I found this
in the first place.
Co-authored-by: Lunny Xiao <xiaolunwen@gmail.com>
Provide a new type to make it easier to parse a ref name.
Actually, it's picked up from #21937, to make the origin PR lighter.
Co-authored-by: Lunny Xiao <xiaolunwen@gmail.com>
Change all license headers to comply with REUSE specification.
Fix#16132
Co-authored-by: flynnnnnnnnnn <flynnnnnnnnnn@github>
Co-authored-by: John Olheiser <john.olheiser@gmail.com>
Although git does expect that author names should be of the form: `NAME
<EMAIL>` some users have been able to create commits with: `<EMAIL>`
Fix#21900
Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net>
Co-authored-by: delvh <dev.lh@web.de>
Co-authored-by: Lauris BH <lauris@nix.lv>
Co-authored-by: Lunny Xiao <xiaolunwen@gmail.com>
Fix#20456
At some point during the 1.17 cycle abbreviated refishs to issue
branches started breaking. This is likely due serious inconsistencies in
our management of refs throughout Gitea - which is a bug needing to be
addressed in a different PR. (Likely more than one)
We should try to use non-abbreviated `fullref`s as much as possible.
That is where a user has inputted a abbreviated `refish` we should add
`refs/heads/` if it is `branch` etc. I know people keep writing and
merging PRs that remove prefixes from stored content but it is just
wrong and it keeps causing problems like this. We should only remove the
prefix at the time of
presentation as the prefix is the only way of knowing umambiguously and
permanently if the `ref` is referring to a `branch`, `tag` or `commit` /
`SHA`. We need to make it so that every ref has the appropriate prefix,
and probably also need to come up with some definitely unambiguous way
of storing `SHA`s if they're used in a `ref` or `refish` field. We must
not store a potentially
ambiguous `refish` as a `ref`. (Especially when referring a `tag` -
there is no reason why users cannot create a `branch` with the same
short name as a `tag` and vice versa and any attempt to prevent this
will fail. You can even create a `branch` and a
`tag` that matches the `SHA` pattern.)
To that end in order to fix this bug, when parsing issue templates check
the provided `Ref` (here a `refish` because almost all users do not know
or understand the subtly), if it does not start with `refs/` add the
`BranchPrefix` to it. This allows people to make their templates refer
to a `tag` but not to a `SHA` directly. (I don't think that is
particularly unreasonable but if people disagree I can make the `refish`
be checked to see if it matches the `SHA` pattern.)
Next we need to handle the issue links that are already written. The
links here are created with `git.RefURL`
Here we see there is a bug introduced in #17551 whereby the provided
`ref` argument can be double-escaped so we remove the incorrect external
escape. (The escape added in #17551 is in the right place -
unfortunately I missed that the calling function was doing the wrong
thing.)
Then within `RefURL()` we check if an unprefixed `ref` (therefore
potentially a `refish`) matches the `SHA` pattern before assuming that
is actually a `commit` - otherwise is assumed to be a `branch`. This
will handle most of the problem cases excepting the very unusual cases
where someone has deliberately written a `branch` to look like a `SHA1`.
But please if something is called a `ref` or interpreted as a `ref` make
it a full-ref before storing or using it. By all means if something is a
`branch` assume the prefix is removed but always add it back in if you
are using it as a `ref`. Stop storing abbreviated `branch` names and
`tag` names - which are `refish` as a `ref`. It will keep on causing
problems like this.
Fix#20456
Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net>
Co-authored-by: Lauris BH <lauris@nix.lv>
Co-authored-by: wxiaoguang <wxiaoguang@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Lunny Xiao <xiaolunwen@gmail.com>
The doctor check `storages` currently only checks the attachment
storage. This PR adds some basic garbage collection functionality for
the other types of storage.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net>
Co-authored-by: Lunny Xiao <xiaolunwen@gmail.com>
There was a bug introduced in #21352 due to a change of behaviour caused
by #19280. This causes a panic on running the default doctor checks
because the panic introduced by #19280 assumes that the only way
opts.StdOut and opts.Stderr can be set in RunOpts is deliberately.
Unfortunately, when running a git.Command the provided RunOpts can be
set, therefore if you share a common set of RunOpts these two values can
be set by the previous commands.
This PR stops using common RunOpts for the commands in that doctor check
but secondly stops RunCommand variants from changing the provided
RunOpts.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net>
A lot of our code is repeatedly testing if individual errors are
specific types of Not Exist errors. This is repetitative and unnecesary.
`Unwrap() error` provides a common way of labelling an error as a
NotExist error and we can/should use this.
This PR has chosen to use the common `io/fs` errors e.g.
`fs.ErrNotExist` for our errors. This is in some ways not completely
correct as these are not filesystem errors but it seems like a
reasonable thing to do and would allow us to simplify a lot of our code
to `errors.Is(err, fs.ErrNotExist)` instead of
`package.IsErr...NotExist(err)`
I am open to suggestions to use a different base error - perhaps
`models/db.ErrNotExist` if that would be felt to be better.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net>
Co-authored-by: delvh <dev.lh@web.de>
After some discussion, introduce a new slice `brokenArgs` to make
`gitCmd.Run()` return errors if any dynamic argument is invalid.
Co-authored-by: delvh <dev.lh@web.de>
We should only log CheckPath errors if they are not simply due to
context cancellation - and we should add a little more context to the
error message.
Fix#20709
Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net>
Close#20315 (fix the panic when parsing invalid input), Speed up #20231 (use ls-tree without size field)
Introduce ListEntriesRecursiveFast (ls-tree without size) and ListEntriesRecursiveWithSize (ls-tree with size)
Using `append(args, strings.Fields(arg)...)` is dangerous, it may
generate incorrect results.
For example: `arg1 "the dangerous"` will be splitted to 3 arguments:
`arg1`, `"the`, `dangerous"`. In some cases the incorrect arguments may
lead to security problems.
This fixes#5709 and #17316 by changing the order of listed branches
and tags to show the ones with latest commits atop.
It's achieved with changing underlying "show-ref" git command with
"for-each-ref" as suggested in https://stackoverflow.com/a/5188364
Also, it's passing format string so the output matches "show-ref"
command output.
close#5709close#17316
A testing cleanup.
This pull request replaces `os.MkdirTemp` with `t.TempDir`. We can use the `T.TempDir` function from the `testing` package to create temporary directory. The directory created by `T.TempDir` is automatically removed when the test and all its subtests complete.
This saves us at least 2 lines (error check, and cleanup) on every instance, or in some cases adds cleanup that we forgot.
Reference: https://pkg.go.dev/testing#T.TempDir
```go
func TestFoo(t *testing.T) {
// before
tmpDir, err := os.MkdirTemp("", "")
require.NoError(t, err)
defer os.RemoveAll(tmpDir)
// now
tmpDir := t.TempDir()
}
```
Signed-off-by: Eng Zer Jun <engzerjun@gmail.com>
When setting.Git.DisablePartialClone is set to false then the web server will add filter support to web http. It does this by using`-c` command arguments but this will not work on gitea serv as the upload-pack and receive-pack commands do not support this.
Instead we move these options into the .gitconfig instead.
Fix#20400
Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net>