Filip Hejsek [Sun, 28 Jan 2024 03:29:33 +0000 (04:29 +0100)]
t0411: add tests for cloning from partial repo
Cloning from a partial repository must not fetch missing objects into
the partial repository, because that can lead to arbitrary code
execution.
Add a couple of test cases, pretending to the `upload-pack` command (and
to that command only) that it is working on a repository owned by
someone else.
Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Filip Hejsek <filip.hejsek@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
ci(linux32): add a note about Actions that must not be updated
The Docker container used by the `linux32` job comes without Node.js,
and therefore the `actions/checkout` and `actions/upload-artifact`
Actions cannot be upgraded to the latest versions (because they use
Node.js).
One time too many, I accidentally tried to update them, where
`actions/checkout` at least fails immediately, but the
`actions/upload-artifact` step is only used when any test fails, and
therefore the CI run usually passes even though that Action was updated
to a version that is incompatible with the Docker container in which
this job runs.
So let's add a big fat warning, mainly for my own benefit, to avoid
running into the very same issue over and over again.
Backported-from: 20e0ff8835 (ci(linux32): add a note about Actions that must not be updated, 2024-02-11) Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Junio C Hamano [Fri, 2 Feb 2024 20:39:35 +0000 (12:39 -0800)]
GitHub Actions: update to github-script@v7
We seem to be getting "Node.js 16 actions are deprecated." warnings
for jobs that use github-script@v6. Update to github-script@v7,
which is said to use Node.js 20.
Backported-from: c4ddbe043e (GitHub Actions: update to github-script@v7, 2024-02-02) Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
After activating automatic Dependabot updates in the
git-for-windows/git repository, Dependabot noticed a couple
of yet-unaddressed updates. They avoid "Node.js 16 Actions"
deprecation messages by bumping the following Actions'
versions:
- actions/upload-artifact from 3 to 4
- actions/download-artifact from 3 to 4
- actions/cache from 3 to 4
Backported-from: 820a340085 (ci: bump remaining outdated Actions versions, 2024-02-11) Helped-by: Matthias Aßhauer <mha1993@live.de> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Junio C Hamano [Fri, 2 Feb 2024 20:39:34 +0000 (12:39 -0800)]
GitHub Actions: update to checkout@v4
We seem to be getting "Node.js 16 actions are deprecated." warnings
for jobs that use checkout@v3. Except for the i686 containers job
that is kept at checkout@v1 [*], update to checkout@v4, which is
said to use Node.js 20.
[*] 6cf4d908 (ci(main): upgrade actions/checkout to v3, 2022-12-05)
refers to https://github.com/actions/runner/issues/2115 and
explains why container jobs are kept at checkout@v1. We may
want to check the current status of the issue and move it to the
same version as other jobs, but that is outside the scope of
this step.
Backported-from: e94dec0c1d (GitHub Actions: update to checkout@v4, 2024-02-02) Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Tests with LSan from time to time seem to emit harmless message
that makes our tests unnecessarily flakey; we work it around by
filtering the uninteresting output.
Merge branch 'backport/jk/libcurl-8.7-regression-workaround' into maint-2.39
Fix was added to work around a regression in libcURL 8.7.0 (which has
already been fixed in their tip of the tree).
* jk/libcurl-8.7-regression-workaround:
remote-curl: add Transfer-Encoding header only for older curl
INSTALL: bump libcurl version to 7.21.3
http: reset POSTFIELDSIZE when clearing curl handle
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
* jk/httpd-test-updates:
t/lib-httpd: increase ssl key size to 2048 bits
t/lib-httpd: drop SSLMutex config
t/lib-httpd: bump required apache version to 2.4
t/lib-httpd: bump required apache version to 2.2
This is a backport onto the `maint-2.39` branch, to improve the CI
health of that branch.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
* jk/http-test-fixes:
t5559: make SSL/TLS the default
t5559: fix test failures with LIB_HTTPD_SSL
t/lib-httpd: enable HTTP/2 "h2" protocol, not just h2c
t/lib-httpd: respect $HTTPD_PROTO in expect_askpass()
t5551: drop curl trace lines without headers
t5551: handle v2 protocol in cookie test
t5551: simplify expected cookie file
t5551: handle v2 protocol in upload-pack service test
t5551: handle v2 protocol when checking curl trace
t5551: stop forcing clone to run with v0 protocol
t5551: handle HTTP/2 when checking curl trace
t5551: lower-case headers in expected curl trace
t5551: drop redundant grep for Accept-Language
t5541: simplify and move "no empty path components" test
t5541: stop marking "used receive-pack service" test as v0 only
t5541: run "used receive-pack service" test earlier
This is a backport onto the `maint-2.39` branch, starting to take care
of making that branch's CI builds healthy again.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Every once in a while, the `git-p4` tests flake for reasons outside of
our control. It typically fails with "Connection refused" e.g. here:
https://github.com/git/git/actions/runs/5969707156/job/16196057724
[...]
+ git p4 clone --dest=/home/runner/work/git/git/t/trash directory.t9807-git-p4-submit/git //depot
Initialized empty Git repository in /home/runner/work/git/git/t/trash directory.t9807-git-p4-submit/git/.git/
Perforce client error:
Connect to server failed; check $P4PORT.
TCP connect to localhost:9807 failed.
connect: 127.0.0.1:9807: Connection refused
failure accessing depot: could not run p4
Importing from //depot into /home/runner/work/git/git/t/trash directory.t9807-git-p4-submit/git
[...]
This happens in other jobs, too, but in the `linux-asan`/`linux-ubsan`
jobs it hurts the most because those jobs often take an _awfully_ long
time to run, therefore re-running a failed `linux-asan`/`linux-ubsan`
jobs is _very_ costly.
The purpose of the `linux-asan`/`linux-ubsan` jobs is to exercise the C
code of Git, anyway, and any part of Git's source code that the `git-p4`
tests run and that would benefit from the attention of ASAN/UBSAN are
run better in other tests anyway, as debugging C code run via Python
scripts can get a bit hairy.
In fact, it is not even just `git-p4` that is the problem (even if it
flakes often enough to be problematic in the CI builds), but really the
part about Python scripts. So let's just skip any Python parts of the
tests from being run in that job.
For good measure, also skip the Subversion tests because debugging C
code run via Perl scripts is as much fun as debugging C code run via
Python scripts. And it will reduce the time this very expensive job
takes, which is a big benefit.
Backported to `maint-2.39` as another step to get that branch's CI
builds back to a healthy state.
Backported-from: 6ba913629f (ci(linux-asan-ubsan): let's save some time, 2023-08-29) Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
PtraceRegistersStatus have_registers =
suspended_threads.GetRegistersAndSP(i, ®isters, &sp);
if (have_registers != REGISTERS_AVAILABLE) {
Report("Unable to get registers from thread %llu.\n", os_id);
// If unable to get SP, consider the entire stack to be reachable unless
// GetRegistersAndSP failed with ESRCH.
if (have_registers == REGISTERS_UNAVAILABLE_FATAL)
continue;
sp = stack_begin;
}
The program itself still runs fine and LSan doesn't cause us to abort.
But test-lib.sh looks for any non-empty LSan logs and marks the test as
a failure anyway, under the assumption that we simply missed the failing
exit code somehow.
I don't think I've ever seen this happen in the CI job, but running
locally using clang-14 on an 8-core machine, I can't seem to make it
through a full run of the test suite without having at least one
failure. And it's a different one every time (though they do seem to
often be related to packing tests, which makes sense, since that is one
of our biggest users of threaded code).
We can hack around this by only counting LSan log files that contain a
line that doesn't match our known-uninteresting pattern.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
In April, GitHub announced that the `macos-13` pool is available:
https://github.blog/changelog/2023-04-24-github-actions-macos-13-is-now-available/.
It is only a matter of time until the `macos-12` pool is going away,
therefore we should switch now, without pressure of a looming deadline.
Since the `macos-13` runners no longer include Python2, we also drop
specifically testing with Python2 and switch uniformly to Python3, see
https://github.com/actions/runner-images/blob/HEAD/images/macos/macos-13-Readme.md
for details about the software available on the `macos-13` pool's
runners.
Also, on macOS 13, Homebrew seems to install a `gcc@9` package that no
longer comes with a regular `unistd.h` (there seems only to be a
`ssp/unistd.h`), and hence builds would fail with:
In file included from base85.c:1:
git-compat-util.h:223:10: fatal error: unistd.h: No such file or directory
223 | #include <unistd.h>
| ^~~~~~~~~~
compilation terminated.
The reason why we install GCC v9.x explicitly is historical, and back in
the days it was because it was the _newest_ version available via
Homebrew: 176441bfb58 (ci: build Git with GCC 9 in the 'osx-gcc' build
job, 2019-11-27).
To reinstate the spirit of that commit _and_ to fix that build failure,
let's switch to the now-newest GCC version: v13.x.
Backported-from: 682a868f67 (ci: upgrade to using macos-13, 2023-11-03) Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Jeff King [Fri, 5 Apr 2024 20:04:51 +0000 (16:04 -0400)]
remote-curl: add Transfer-Encoding header only for older curl
As of curl 7.66.0, we don't need to manually specify a "chunked"
Transfer-Encoding header. Instead, modern curl deduces the need for it
in a POST that has a POSTFIELDSIZE of -1 and uses READFUNCTION rather
than POSTFIELDS.
That version is recent enough that we can't just drop the header; we
need to do so conditionally. Since it's only a single line, it seems
like the simplest thing would just be to keep setting it unconditionally
(after all, the #ifdefs are much longer than the actual code). But
there's another wrinkle: HTTP/2.
Curl may choose to use HTTP/2 under the hood if the server supports it.
And in that protocol, we do not use the chunked encoding for streaming
at all. Most versions of curl handle this just fine by recognizing and
removing the header. But there's a regression in curl 8.7.0 and 8.7.1
where it doesn't, and large requests over HTTP/2 are broken (which t5559
notices). That regression has since been fixed upstream, but not yet
released.
Make the setting of this header conditional, which will let Git work
even with those buggy curl versions. And as a bonus, it serves as a
reminder that we can eventually clean up the code as we bump the
supported curl versions.
This is a backport of 92a209bf24 (remote-curl: add Transfer-Encoding
header only for older curl, 2024-04-05) into the `maint-2.39` branch.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Jeff King [Tue, 2 Apr 2024 20:06:00 +0000 (16:06 -0400)]
INSTALL: bump libcurl version to 7.21.3
Our documentation claims we support curl versions back to 7.19.5. But we
can no longer compile with that version since adding an unconditional
use of CURLOPT_RESOLVE in 511cfd3bff (http: add custom hostname to IP
address resolutions, 2022-05-16). That feature wasn't added to libcurl
until 7.21.3.
We could add #ifdefs to make this work back to 7.19.5. But given that
nobody noticed the compilation failure in the intervening two years, it
makes more sense to bump the version in the documentation to 7.21.3
(which is itself over 13 years old).
We could perhaps go forward even more (which would let us drop some
cruft from git-curl-compat.h), but this should be an obviously safe
jump, and we can move forward later.
Note that user-visible syntax for CURLOPT_RESOLVE has grown new features
in subsequent curl versions. Our documentation mentions "+" and "-"
entries, which require more recent versions than 7.21.3. We could
perhaps clarify that in our docs, but it's probably not worth cluttering
them with restrictions of ancient curl versions.
This is a backport of c28ee09503 (INSTALL: bump libcurl version to
7.21.3, 2024-04-02) into the `maint-2.39` branch.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Jeff King [Tue, 2 Apr 2024 20:05:17 +0000 (16:05 -0400)]
http: reset POSTFIELDSIZE when clearing curl handle
In get_active_slot(), we return a CURL handle that may have been used
before (reusing them is good because it lets curl reuse the same
connection across many requests). We set a few curl options back to
defaults that may have been modified by previous requests.
We reset POSTFIELDS to NULL, but do not reset POSTFIELDSIZE (which
defaults to "-1"). This usually doesn't matter because most POSTs will
set both fields together anyway. But there is one exception: when
handling a large request in remote-curl's post_rpc(), we don't set
_either_, and instead set a READFUNCTION to stream data into libcurl.
This can interact weirdly with a stale POSTFIELDSIZE setting, because
curl will assume it should read only some set number of bytes from our
READFUNCTION. However, it has worked in practice because we also
manually set a "Transfer-Encoding: chunked" header, which libcurl uses
as a clue to set the POSTFIELDSIZE to -1 itself.
So everything works, but we're better off resetting the size manually
for a few reasons:
- there was a regression in curl 8.7.0 where the chunked header
detection didn't kick in, causing any large HTTP requests made by
Git to fail. This has since been fixed (but not yet released). In
the issue, curl folks recommended setting it explicitly to -1:
and it indeed works around the regression. So even though it won't
be strictly necessary after the fix there, this will help folks who
end up using the affected libcurl versions.
- it's consistent with what a new curl handle would look like. Since
get_active_slot() may or may not return a used handle, this reduces
the possibility of heisenbugs that only appear with certain request
patterns.
Note that the recommendation in the curl issue is to actually drop the
manual Transfer-Encoding header. Modern libcurl will add the header
itself when streaming from a READFUNCTION. However, that code wasn't
added until 802aa5ae2 (HTTP: use chunked Transfer-Encoding for HTTP_POST
if size unknown, 2019-07-22), which is in curl 7.66.0. We claim to
support back to 7.19.5, so those older versions still need the manual
header.
This is a backport of 3242311742 (http: reset POSTFIELDSIZE when
clearing curl handle, 2024-04-02) into the `maint-2.39` branch.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Jeff King [Fri, 15 Sep 2023 11:34:43 +0000 (07:34 -0400)]
http: update curl http/2 info matching for curl 8.3.0
To redact header lines in http/2 curl traces, we have to parse past some
prefix bytes that curl sticks in the info lines it passes to us. That
changed once already, and we adapted in db30130165 (http: handle both
"h2" and "h2h3" in curl info lines, 2023-06-17).
Now it has changed again, in curl's fbacb14c4 (http2: cleanup trace
messages, 2023-08-04), which was released in curl 8.3.0. Running a build
of git linked against that version will fail to redact the trace (and as
before, t5559 notices and complains).
The format here is a little more complicated than the other ones, as it
now includes a "stream id". This is not constant but is always numeric,
so we can easily parse past it.
We'll continue to match the old versions, of course, since we want to
work with many different versions of curl. We can't even select one
format at compile time, because the behavior depends on the runtime
version of curl we use, not the version we build against.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Jeff King [Fri, 15 Sep 2023 11:33:16 +0000 (07:33 -0400)]
http: factor out matching of curl http/2 trace lines
We have to parse out curl's http/2 trace lines so we can redact their
headers. We already match two different types of lines from various
vintages of curl. In preparation for adding another (which will be
slightly more complex), let's pull the matching into its own function,
rather than doing it in the middle of a conditional.
While we're doing so, let's expand the comment a bit to describe the two
matches. That probably should have been part of db30130165 (http: handle
both "h2" and "h2h3" in curl info lines, 2023-06-17), but will become
even more important as we add new types.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Jeff King [Sat, 17 Jun 2023 05:15:59 +0000 (01:15 -0400)]
http: handle both "h2" and "h2h3" in curl info lines
When redacting auth tokens in trace output from curl, we look for http/2
headers of the form "h2h3 [header: value]". This comes from b637a41ebe
(http: redact curl h2h3 headers in info, 2022-11-11).
But the "h2h3" prefix changed to just "h2" in curl's fc2f1e547 (http2:
support HTTP/2 to forward proxies, non-tunneling, 2023-04-14). That's in
released version curl 8.1.0; linking against that version means we'll
fail to correctly redact the trace. Our t5559.17 notices and fails.
We can fix this by matching either prefix, which should handle both old
and new versions.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* maint-2.38: (32 commits)
Git 2.38.5
Git 2.37.7
Git 2.36.6
Git 2.35.8
Git 2.34.8
Git 2.33.8
Git 2.32.7
Git 2.31.8
tests: avoid using `test_i18ncmp`
Git 2.30.9
gettext: avoid using gettext if the locale dir is not present
apply --reject: overwrite existing `.rej` symlink if it exists
http.c: clear the 'finished' member once we are done with it
clone.c: avoid "exceeds maximum object size" error with GCC v12.x
range-diff: use ssize_t for parsed "len" in read_patches()
range-diff: handle unterminated lines in read_patches()
range-diff: drop useless "offset" variable from read_patches()
t5604: GETTEXT_POISON fix, conclusion
t5604: GETTEXT_POISON fix, part 1
t5619: GETTEXT_POISON fix
t0003: GETTEXT_POISON fix, conclusion
...
* maint-2.37: (31 commits)
Git 2.37.7
Git 2.36.6
Git 2.35.8
Git 2.34.8
Git 2.33.8
Git 2.32.7
Git 2.31.8
tests: avoid using `test_i18ncmp`
Git 2.30.9
gettext: avoid using gettext if the locale dir is not present
apply --reject: overwrite existing `.rej` symlink if it exists
http.c: clear the 'finished' member once we are done with it
clone.c: avoid "exceeds maximum object size" error with GCC v12.x
range-diff: use ssize_t for parsed "len" in read_patches()
range-diff: handle unterminated lines in read_patches()
range-diff: drop useless "offset" variable from read_patches()
t5604: GETTEXT_POISON fix, conclusion
t5604: GETTEXT_POISON fix, part 1
t5619: GETTEXT_POISON fix
t0003: GETTEXT_POISON fix, conclusion
t0003: GETTEXT_POISON fix, part 1
...
* maint-2.36: (30 commits)
Git 2.36.6
Git 2.35.8
Git 2.34.8
Git 2.33.8
Git 2.32.7
Git 2.31.8
tests: avoid using `test_i18ncmp`
Git 2.30.9
gettext: avoid using gettext if the locale dir is not present
apply --reject: overwrite existing `.rej` symlink if it exists
http.c: clear the 'finished' member once we are done with it
clone.c: avoid "exceeds maximum object size" error with GCC v12.x
range-diff: use ssize_t for parsed "len" in read_patches()
range-diff: handle unterminated lines in read_patches()
range-diff: drop useless "offset" variable from read_patches()
t5604: GETTEXT_POISON fix, conclusion
t5604: GETTEXT_POISON fix, part 1
t5619: GETTEXT_POISON fix
t0003: GETTEXT_POISON fix, conclusion
t0003: GETTEXT_POISON fix, part 1
t0033: GETTEXT_POISON fix
...
* maint-2.35: (29 commits)
Git 2.35.8
Git 2.34.8
Git 2.33.8
Git 2.32.7
Git 2.31.8
tests: avoid using `test_i18ncmp`
Git 2.30.9
gettext: avoid using gettext if the locale dir is not present
apply --reject: overwrite existing `.rej` symlink if it exists
http.c: clear the 'finished' member once we are done with it
clone.c: avoid "exceeds maximum object size" error with GCC v12.x
range-diff: use ssize_t for parsed "len" in read_patches()
range-diff: handle unterminated lines in read_patches()
range-diff: drop useless "offset" variable from read_patches()
t5604: GETTEXT_POISON fix, conclusion
t5604: GETTEXT_POISON fix, part 1
t5619: GETTEXT_POISON fix
t0003: GETTEXT_POISON fix, conclusion
t0003: GETTEXT_POISON fix, part 1
t0033: GETTEXT_POISON fix
http: support CURLOPT_PROTOCOLS_STR
...
* maint-2.34: (28 commits)
Git 2.34.8
Git 2.33.8
Git 2.32.7
Git 2.31.8
tests: avoid using `test_i18ncmp`
Git 2.30.9
gettext: avoid using gettext if the locale dir is not present
apply --reject: overwrite existing `.rej` symlink if it exists
http.c: clear the 'finished' member once we are done with it
clone.c: avoid "exceeds maximum object size" error with GCC v12.x
range-diff: use ssize_t for parsed "len" in read_patches()
range-diff: handle unterminated lines in read_patches()
range-diff: drop useless "offset" variable from read_patches()
t5604: GETTEXT_POISON fix, conclusion
t5604: GETTEXT_POISON fix, part 1
t5619: GETTEXT_POISON fix
t0003: GETTEXT_POISON fix, conclusion
t0003: GETTEXT_POISON fix, part 1
t0033: GETTEXT_POISON fix
http: support CURLOPT_PROTOCOLS_STR
http: prefer CURLOPT_SEEKFUNCTION to CURLOPT_IOCTLFUNCTION
...
* maint-2.33: (27 commits)
Git 2.33.8
Git 2.32.7
Git 2.31.8
tests: avoid using `test_i18ncmp`
Git 2.30.9
gettext: avoid using gettext if the locale dir is not present
apply --reject: overwrite existing `.rej` symlink if it exists
http.c: clear the 'finished' member once we are done with it
clone.c: avoid "exceeds maximum object size" error with GCC v12.x
range-diff: use ssize_t for parsed "len" in read_patches()
range-diff: handle unterminated lines in read_patches()
range-diff: drop useless "offset" variable from read_patches()
t5604: GETTEXT_POISON fix, conclusion
t5604: GETTEXT_POISON fix, part 1
t5619: GETTEXT_POISON fix
t0003: GETTEXT_POISON fix, conclusion
t0003: GETTEXT_POISON fix, part 1
t0033: GETTEXT_POISON fix
http: support CURLOPT_PROTOCOLS_STR
http: prefer CURLOPT_SEEKFUNCTION to CURLOPT_IOCTLFUNCTION
http-push: prefer CURLOPT_UPLOAD to CURLOPT_PUT
...
* maint-2.32: (26 commits)
Git 2.32.7
Git 2.31.8
tests: avoid using `test_i18ncmp`
Git 2.30.9
gettext: avoid using gettext if the locale dir is not present
apply --reject: overwrite existing `.rej` symlink if it exists
http.c: clear the 'finished' member once we are done with it
clone.c: avoid "exceeds maximum object size" error with GCC v12.x
range-diff: use ssize_t for parsed "len" in read_patches()
range-diff: handle unterminated lines in read_patches()
range-diff: drop useless "offset" variable from read_patches()
t5604: GETTEXT_POISON fix, conclusion
t5604: GETTEXT_POISON fix, part 1
t5619: GETTEXT_POISON fix
t0003: GETTEXT_POISON fix, conclusion
t0003: GETTEXT_POISON fix, part 1
t0033: GETTEXT_POISON fix
http: support CURLOPT_PROTOCOLS_STR
http: prefer CURLOPT_SEEKFUNCTION to CURLOPT_IOCTLFUNCTION
http-push: prefer CURLOPT_UPLOAD to CURLOPT_PUT
ci: install python on ubuntu
...
* maint-2.31: (25 commits)
Git 2.31.8
tests: avoid using `test_i18ncmp`
Git 2.30.9
gettext: avoid using gettext if the locale dir is not present
apply --reject: overwrite existing `.rej` symlink if it exists
http.c: clear the 'finished' member once we are done with it
clone.c: avoid "exceeds maximum object size" error with GCC v12.x
range-diff: use ssize_t for parsed "len" in read_patches()
range-diff: handle unterminated lines in read_patches()
range-diff: drop useless "offset" variable from read_patches()
t5604: GETTEXT_POISON fix, conclusion
t5604: GETTEXT_POISON fix, part 1
t5619: GETTEXT_POISON fix
t0003: GETTEXT_POISON fix, conclusion
t0003: GETTEXT_POISON fix, part 1
t0033: GETTEXT_POISON fix
http: support CURLOPT_PROTOCOLS_STR
http: prefer CURLOPT_SEEKFUNCTION to CURLOPT_IOCTLFUNCTION
http-push: prefer CURLOPT_UPLOAD to CURLOPT_PUT
ci: install python on ubuntu
ci: use the same version of p4 on both Linux and macOS
...
* maint-2.30: (23 commits)
Git 2.30.9
gettext: avoid using gettext if the locale dir is not present
apply --reject: overwrite existing `.rej` symlink if it exists
http.c: clear the 'finished' member once we are done with it
clone.c: avoid "exceeds maximum object size" error with GCC v12.x
range-diff: use ssize_t for parsed "len" in read_patches()
range-diff: handle unterminated lines in read_patches()
range-diff: drop useless "offset" variable from read_patches()
t5604: GETTEXT_POISON fix, conclusion
t5604: GETTEXT_POISON fix, part 1
t5619: GETTEXT_POISON fix
t0003: GETTEXT_POISON fix, conclusion
t0003: GETTEXT_POISON fix, part 1
t0033: GETTEXT_POISON fix
http: support CURLOPT_PROTOCOLS_STR
http: prefer CURLOPT_SEEKFUNCTION to CURLOPT_IOCTLFUNCTION
http-push: prefer CURLOPT_UPLOAD to CURLOPT_PUT
ci: install python on ubuntu
ci: use the same version of p4 on both Linux and macOS
ci: remove the pipe after "p4 -V" to catch errors
github-actions: run gcc-8 on ubuntu-20.04 image
...
Avoids issues with renaming or deleting sections with long lines, where
configuration values may be interpreted as sections, leading to
configuration injection. Addresses CVE-2023-29007.
* tb/config-copy-or-rename-in-file-injection:
config.c: disallow overly-long lines in `copy_or_rename_section_in_file()`
config.c: avoid integer truncation in `copy_or_rename_section_in_file()`
config: avoid fixed-sized buffer when renaming/deleting a section
t1300: demonstrate failure when renaming sections with long lines
Taylor Blau [Wed, 12 Apr 2023 23:18:28 +0000 (19:18 -0400)]
config.c: disallow overly-long lines in `copy_or_rename_section_in_file()`
As a defense-in-depth measure to guard against any potentially-unknown
buffer overflows in `copy_or_rename_section_in_file()`, refuse to work
with overly-long lines in a gitconfig.
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Taylor Blau [Thu, 6 Apr 2023 18:28:53 +0000 (14:28 -0400)]
config.c: avoid integer truncation in `copy_or_rename_section_in_file()`
There are a couple of spots within `copy_or_rename_section_in_file()`
that incorrectly use an `int` to track an offset within a string, which
may truncate or wrap around to a negative value.
Historically it was impossible to have a line longer than 1024 bytes
anyway, since we used fgets() with a fixed-size buffer of exactly that
length. But the recent change to use a strbuf permits us to read lines
of arbitrary length, so it's possible for a malicious input to cause us
to overflow past INT_MAX and do an out-of-bounds array read.
Practically speaking, however, this should never happen, since it
requires 2GB section names or values, which are unrealistic in
non-malicious circumstances.
Co-authored-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Taylor Blau [Thu, 6 Apr 2023 18:07:58 +0000 (14:07 -0400)]
config: avoid fixed-sized buffer when renaming/deleting a section
When renaming (or deleting) a section of configuration, Git uses the
function `git_config_copy_or_rename_section_in_file()` to rewrite the
configuration file after applying the rename or deletion to the given
section.
To do this, Git repeatedly calls `fgets()` to read the existing
configuration data into a fixed size buffer.
When the configuration value under `old_name` exceeds the size of the
buffer, we will call `fgets()` an additional time even if there is no
newline in the configuration file, since our read length is capped at
`sizeof(buf)`.
If the first character of the buffer (after zero or more characters
satisfying `isspace()`) is a '[', Git will incorrectly treat it as
beginning a new section when the original section is being removed. In
other words, a configuration value satisfying this criteria can
incorrectly be considered as a new secftion instead of a variable in the
original section.
Avoid this issue by using a variable-width buffer in the form of a
strbuf rather than a fixed-with region on the stack. A couple of small
points worth noting:
- Using a strbuf will cause us to allocate arbitrary sizes to match
the length of each line. In practice, we don't expect any
reasonable configuration files to have lines that long, and a
bandaid will be introduced in a later patch to ensure that this is
the case.
- We are using strbuf_getwholeline() here instead of strbuf_getline()
in order to match `fgets()`'s behavior of leaving the trailing LF
character on the buffer (as well as a trailing NUL).
This could be changed later, but using strbuf_getwholeline() changes
the least about this function's implementation, so it is picked as
the safest path.
- It is temping to want to replace the loop to skip over characters
matching isspace() at the beginning of the buffer with a convenience
function like `strbuf_ltrim()`. But this is the wrong approach for a
couple of reasons:
First, it involves a potentially large and expensive `memmove()`
which we would like to avoid. Second, and more importantly, we also
*do* want to preserve those spaces to avoid changing the output of
other sections.
In all, this patch is a minimal replacement of the fixed-width buffer in
`git_config_copy_or_rename_section_in_file()` to instead use a `struct
strbuf`.
Reported-by: André Baptista <andre@ethiack.com> Reported-by: Vítor Pinho <vitor@ethiack.com> Helped-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im> Co-authored-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de> Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
gettext: avoid using gettext if the locale dir is not present
In cc5e1bf99247 (gettext: avoid initialization if the locale dir is not
present, 2018-04-21) Git was taught to avoid a costly gettext start-up
when there are not even any localized messages to work with.
But we still called `gettext()` and `ngettext()` functions.
Which caused a problem in Git for Windows when the libgettext that is
consumed from the MSYS2 project stopped using a runtime prefix in
https://github.com/msys2/MINGW-packages/pull/10461
Due to that change, we now use an unintialized gettext machinery that
might get auto-initialized _using an unintended locale directory_:
`C:\mingw64\share\locale`.
Let's record the fact when the gettext initialization was skipped, and
skip calling the gettext functions accordingly.
This addresses CVE-2023-25815.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Taylor Blau [Thu, 6 Apr 2023 15:42:03 +0000 (11:42 -0400)]
t1300: demonstrate failure when renaming sections with long lines
When renaming a configuration section which has an entry whose length
exceeds the size of our buffer in config.c's implementation of
`git_config_copy_or_rename_section_in_file()`, Git will incorrectly
form a new configuration section with part of the data in the section
being removed.
In this instance, our first configuration file looks something like:
[b]
c = d <spaces> [a] e = f
[a]
g = h
Here, we have two configuration values, "b.c", and "a.g". The value "[a]
e = f" belongs to the configuration value "b.c", and does not form its
own section.
However, when renaming the section 'a' to 'xyz', Git will write back
"[xyz]\ne = f", but "[xyz]" is still attached to the value of "b.c",
which is why "e = f" on its own line becomes a new entry called "b.e".
A slightly different example embeds the section being renamed within
another section.
Demonstrate this failure in a test in t1300, which we will fix in the
following commit.
Co-authored-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de> Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de> Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
apply --reject: overwrite existing `.rej` symlink if it exists
The `git apply --reject` is expected to write out `.rej` files in case
one or more hunks fail to apply cleanly. Historically, the command
overwrites any existing `.rej` files. The idea being that
apply/reject/edit cycles are relatively common, and the generated `.rej`
files are not considered precious.
But the command does not overwrite existing `.rej` symbolic links, and
instead follows them. This is unsafe because the same patch could
potentially create such a symbolic link and point at arbitrary paths
outside the current worktree, and `git apply` would write the contents
of the `.rej` file into that location.
Therefore, let's make sure that any existing `.rej` file or symbolic
link is removed before writing it.
Reported-by: RyotaK <ryotak.mail@gmail.com> Helped-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com> Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com> Helped-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linuxfoundation.org> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
The `maint-2.30` branch accumulated quite a few fixes over the past two
years. Most of those fixes were originally based on newer versions, and
while the patches cherry-picked cleanly, we weren't diligent enough to
pay attention to the CI builds and the GETTEXT_POISON job regressed.
This topic branch fixes that.
Derrick Stolee [Tue, 23 Aug 2022 17:28:11 +0000 (17:28 +0000)]
ci: update 'static-analysis' to Ubuntu 22.04
GitHub Actions scheduled a brownout of Ubuntu 18.04, which canceled all
runs of the 'static-analysis' job in our CI runs. Update to 22.04 to
avoid this as the brownout later turns into a complete deprecation.
The use of 18.04 was set in d051ed77ee6 (.github/workflows/main.yml: run
static-analysis on bionic, 2021-02-08) due to the lack of Coccinelle
being available on 20.04 (which continues today).
Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <derrickstolee@github.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Jeff King [Tue, 18 Oct 2022 20:15:33 +0000 (16:15 -0400)]
Makefile: force -O0 when compiling with SANITIZE=leak
Cherry pick commit d3775de0 (Makefile: force -O0 when compiling with
SANITIZE=leak, 2022-10-18), as otherwise the leak checker at GitHub
Actions CI seems to fail with a false positive.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Junio C Hamano [Mon, 30 Aug 2021 23:06:05 +0000 (16:06 -0700)]
Merge branch 'backport/jk/range-diff-fixes'
"git range-diff" code clean-up. Needed to pacify modern GCC versions.
* jk/range-diff-fixes:
range-diff: use ssize_t for parsed "len" in read_patches()
range-diff: handle unterminated lines in read_patches()
range-diff: drop useless "offset" variable from read_patches()
Junio C Hamano [Fri, 20 Jan 2023 23:36:21 +0000 (15:36 -0800)]
Merge branch 'backport/jk/curl-avoid-deprecated-api' into maint-2.30
Deal with a few deprecation warning from cURL library.
* jk/curl-avoid-deprecated-api:
http: support CURLOPT_PROTOCOLS_STR
http: prefer CURLOPT_SEEKFUNCTION to CURLOPT_IOCTLFUNCTION
http-push: prefer CURLOPT_UPLOAD to CURLOPT_PUT
Junio C Hamano [Sat, 10 Dec 2022 07:17:47 +0000 (16:17 +0900)]
Merge branch 'backport/jx/ci-ubuntu-fix' into maint-2.30
Adjust the GitHub CI to newer ubuntu release.
* jx/ci-ubuntu-fix:
github-actions: run gcc-8 on ubuntu-20.04 image
ci: install python on ubuntu
ci: use the same version of p4 on both Linux and macOS
ci: remove the pipe after "p4 -V" to catch errors
Junio C Hamano [Thu, 2 Mar 2023 16:44:16 +0000 (08:44 -0800)]
http.c: clear the 'finished' member once we are done with it
In http.c, the run_active_slot() function allows the given "slot" to
make progress by calling step_active_slots() in a loop repeatedly,
and the loop is not left until the request held in the slot
completes.
Ages ago, we used to use the slot->in_use member to get out of the
loop, which misbehaved when the request in "slot" completes (at
which time, the result of the request is copied away from the slot,
and the in_use member is cleared, making the slot ready to be
reused), and the "slot" gets reused to service a different request
(at which time, the "slot" becomes in_use again, even though it is
for a different request). The loop terminating condition mistakenly
thought that the original request has yet to be completed.
Today's code, after baa7b67d (HTTP slot reuse fixes, 2006-03-10)
fixed this issue, uses a separate "slot->finished" member that is
set in run_active_slot() to point to an on-stack variable, and the
code that completes the request in finish_active_slot() clears the
on-stack variable via the pointer to signal that the particular
request held by the slot has completed. It also clears the in_use
member (as before that fix), so that the slot itself can safely be
reused for an unrelated request.
One thing that is not quite clean in this arrangement is that,
unless the slot gets reused, at which point the finished member is
reset to NULL, the member keeps the value of &finished, which
becomes a dangling pointer into the stack when run_active_slot()
returns. Clear the finished member before the control leaves the
function, which has a side effect of unconfusing compilers like
recent GCC 12 that is over-eager to warn against such an assignment.
clone.c: avoid "exceeds maximum object size" error with GCC v12.x
Technically, the pointer difference `end - start` _could_ be negative,
and when cast to an (unsigned) `size_t` that would cause problems. In
this instance, the symptom is:
dir.c: In function 'git_url_basename':
dir.c:3087:13: error: 'memchr' specified bound [9223372036854775808, 0]
exceeds maximum object size 9223372036854775807
[-Werror=stringop-overread]
CC ewah/bitmap.o
3087 | if (memchr(start, '/', end - start) == NULL
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
While it is a bit far-fetched to think that `end` (which is defined as
`repo + strlen(repo)`) and `start` (which starts at `repo` and never
steps beyond the NUL terminator) could result in such a negative
difference, GCC has no way of knowing that.
See also https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla//show_bug.cgi?id=85783.
Let's just add a safety check, primarily for GCC's benefit.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In fade728df122 (apply: fix writing behind newly created symbolic links,
2023-02-02), we backported a patch onto v2.30.* that was originally
based on a much newer version. The v2.30.* release train still has the
GETTEXT_POISON CI job, though, and hence needs `test_i18n*` in its
tests.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
In bffc762f87ae (dir-iterator: prevent top-level symlinks without
FOLLOW_SYMLINKS, 2023-01-24), we backported a patch onto v2.30.* that
was originally based on a much newer version. The v2.30.* release train
still has the GETTEXT_POISON CI job, though, and hence needs
`test_i18n*` in its tests.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
In cf8f6ce02a13 (clone: delay picking a transport until after
get_repo_path(), 2023-01-24), we backported a patch onto v2.30.* that
was originally based on a much newer version. The v2.30.* release train
still has the GETTEXT_POISON CI job, though, and hence needs
`test_i18n*` in its tests.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Jeff King [Mon, 9 Aug 2021 22:48:48 +0000 (18:48 -0400)]
range-diff: use ssize_t for parsed "len" in read_patches()
As we iterate through the buffer containing git-log output, parsing
lines, we use an "int" to store the size of an individual line. This
should be a size_t, as we have no guarantee that there is not a
malicious 2GB+ commit-message line in the output.
Overflowing this integer probably doesn't do anything _too_ terrible. We
are not using the value to size a buffer, so the worst case is probably
an out-of-bounds read from before the array. But it's easy enough to
fix.
Note that we have to use ssize_t here, since we also store the length
result from parse_git_diff_header(), which may return a negative value
for error. That function actually returns an int itself, which has a
similar overflow problem, but I'll leave that for another day. Much
of the apply.c code uses ints and should be converted as a whole; in the
meantime, a negative return from parse_git_diff_header() will be
interpreted as an error, and we'll bail (so we can't handle such a case,
but given that it's likely to be malicious anyway, the important thing
is we don't have any memory errors).
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Acked-by: Derrick Stolee <dstolee@microsoft.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In 3c50032ff528 (attr: ignore overly large gitattributes files,
2022-12-01), we backported a patch onto v2.30.* that was originally
based on a much newer version. The v2.30.* release train still has the
GETTEXT_POISON CI job, though, and hence needs `test_i18n*` in its
tests.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Jeff King [Mon, 9 Aug 2021 22:48:39 +0000 (18:48 -0400)]
range-diff: handle unterminated lines in read_patches()
When parsing our buffer of output from git-log, we have a
find_end_of_line() helper that finds the next newline, and gives us the
number of bytes to move past it, or the size of the whole remaining
buffer if there is no newline.
But trying to handle both those cases leads to some oddities:
- we try to overwrite the newline with NUL in the caller, by writing
over line[len-1]. This is at best redundant, since the helper will
already have done so if it saw a newline. But if it didn't see a
newline, it's actively wrong; we'll overwrite the byte at the end of
the (unterminated) line.
We could solve this just dropping the extra NUL assignment in the
caller and just letting the helper do the right thing. But...
- if we see a "diff --git" line, we'll restore the newline on top of
the NUL byte, so we can pass the string to parse_git_diff_header().
But if there was no newline in the first place, we can't do this.
There's no place to put it (the current code writes a newline
over whatever byte we obliterated earlier). The best we can do is
feed the complete remainder of the buffer to the function (which is,
in fact, a string, by virtue of being a strbuf).
To solve this, the caller needs to know whether we actually found a
newline or not. We could modify find_end_of_line() to return that
information, but we can further observe that it has only one caller.
So let's just inline it in that caller.
Nobody seems to have noticed this case, probably because git-log would
never produce input that doesn't end with a newline. Arguably we could
just return an error as soon as we see that the output does not end in a
newline. But the code to do so actually ends up _longer_, mostly because
of the cleanup we have to do in handling the error.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Acked-by: Derrick Stolee <dstolee@microsoft.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In dfa6b32b5e59 (attr: ignore attribute lines exceeding 2048 bytes,
2022-12-01), we backported a patch onto v2.30.* that was originally
based on a much newer version. The v2.30.* release train still has the
GETTEXT_POISON CI job, though, and hence needs `test_i18n*` in its
tests.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
In e47363e5a8bd (t0033: add tests for safe.directory, 2022-04-13), we
backported a patch onto v2.30.* that was originally based on a much
newer version. The v2.30.* release train still has the GETTEXT_POISON
CI job, though, and hence needs `test_i18n*` in its tests.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Jeff King [Tue, 17 Jan 2023 03:04:48 +0000 (22:04 -0500)]
http: support CURLOPT_PROTOCOLS_STR
The CURLOPT_PROTOCOLS (and matching CURLOPT_REDIR_PROTOCOLS) flag was
deprecated in curl 7.85.0, and using it generate compiler warnings as of
curl 7.87.0. The path forward is to use CURLOPT_PROTOCOLS_STR, but we
can't just do so unilaterally, as it was only introduced less than a
year ago in 7.85.0.
Until that version becomes ubiquitous, we have to either disable the
deprecation warning or conditionally use the "STR" variant on newer
versions of libcurl. This patch switches to the new variant, which is
nice for two reasons:
- we don't have to worry that silencing curl's deprecation warnings
might cause us to miss other more useful ones
- we'd eventually want to move to the new variant anyway, so this gets
us set up (albeit with some extra ugly boilerplate for the
conditional)
There are a lot of ways to split up the two cases. One way would be to
abstract the storage type (strbuf versus a long), how to append
(strbuf_addstr vs bitwise OR), how to initialize, which CURLOPT to use,
and so on. But the resulting code looks pretty magical:
GIT_CURL_PROTOCOL_TYPE allowed = GIT_CURL_PROTOCOL_TYPE_INIT;
if (...http is allowed...)
GIT_CURL_PROTOCOL_APPEND(&allowed, "http", CURLOPT_HTTP);
and you end up with more "#define GIT_CURL_PROTOCOL_TYPE" macros than
actual code.
On the other end of the spectrum, we could just implement two separate
functions, one that handles a string list and one that handles bits. But
then we end up repeating our list of protocols (http, https, ftp, ftp).
This patch takes the middle ground. The run-time code is always there to
handle both types, and we just choose which one to feed to curl.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Jiang Xin [Fri, 25 Nov 2022 09:59:54 +0000 (17:59 +0800)]
ci: install python on ubuntu
Python is missing from the default ubuntu-22.04 runner image, which
prevents git-p4 from working. To install python on ubuntu, we need
to provide the correct package names:
* On Ubuntu 18.04 (bionic), "/usr/bin/python2" is provided by the
"python" package, and "/usr/bin/python3" is provided by the "python3"
package.
* On Ubuntu 20.04 (focal) and above, "/usr/bin/python2" is provided by
the "python2" package which has a different name from bionic, and
"/usr/bin/python3" is provided by "python3".
Since the "ubuntu-latest" runner image has a higher version, its
safe to use "python2" or "python3" package name.
Helped-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <zhiyou.jx@alibaba-inc.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Jeff King [Mon, 9 Aug 2021 22:47:42 +0000 (18:47 -0400)]
range-diff: drop useless "offset" variable from read_patches()
The "offset" variable was was introduced in 44b67cb62b (range-diff:
split lines manually, 2019-07-11), but it has never done anything
useful. We use it to count up the number of bytes we've consumed, but we
never look at the result. It was probably copied accidentally from an
almost-identical loop in apply.c:find_header() (and the point of that
commit was to make use of the parse_git_diff_header() function which
underlies both).
Because the variable was set but not used, most compilers didn't seem to
notice, but the upcoming clang-14 does complain about it, via its
-Wunused-but-set-variable warning.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Acked-by: Derrick Stolee <dstolee@microsoft.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Jeff King [Tue, 17 Jan 2023 03:04:44 +0000 (22:04 -0500)]
http: prefer CURLOPT_SEEKFUNCTION to CURLOPT_IOCTLFUNCTION
The IOCTLFUNCTION option has been deprecated, and generates a compiler
warning in recent versions of curl. We can switch to using SEEKFUNCTION
instead. It was added in 2008 via curl 7.18.0; our INSTALL file already
indicates we require at least curl 7.19.4.
But there's one catch: curl says we should use CURL_SEEKFUNC_{OK,FAIL},
and those didn't arrive until 7.19.5. One workaround would be to use a
bare 0/1 here (or define our own macros). But let's just bump the
minimum required version to 7.19.5. That version is only a minor version
bump from our existing requirement, and is only a 2 month time bump for
versions that are almost 13 years old. So it's not likely that anybody
cares about the distinction.
Switching means we have to rewrite the ioctl functions into seek
functions. In some ways they are simpler (seeking is the only
operation), but in some ways more complex (the ioctl allowed only a full
rewind, but now we can seek to arbitrary offsets).
Curl will only ever use SEEK_SET (per their documentation), so I didn't
bother implementing anything else, since it would naturally be
completely untested. This seems unlikely to change, but I added an
assertion just in case.
Likewise, I doubt curl will ever try to seek outside of the buffer sizes
we've told it, but I erred on the defensive side here, rather than do an
out-of-bounds read.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Jeff King [Tue, 17 Jan 2023 03:04:38 +0000 (22:04 -0500)]
http-push: prefer CURLOPT_UPLOAD to CURLOPT_PUT
The two options do exactly the same thing, but the latter has been
deprecated and in recent versions of curl may produce a compiler
warning. Since the UPLOAD form is available everywhere (it was
introduced in the year 2000 by curl 7.1), we can just switch to it.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
compat/nedmalloc/nedmalloc.c: In function 'DestroyCaches':
compat/nedmalloc/nedmalloc.c:326:12: error: the comparison will always
evaluate as 'true' for the address of 'caches'
will never be NULL [-Werror=address]
326 | if(p->caches)
| ^
compat/nedmalloc/nedmalloc.c:196:22: note: 'caches' declared here
196 | threadcache *caches[THREADCACHEMAXCACHES];
| ^~~~~~
... and it is correct, of course.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Jiang Xin [Fri, 25 Nov 2022 09:59:53 +0000 (17:59 +0800)]
ci: use the same version of p4 on both Linux and macOS
There would be a segmentation fault when running p4 v16.2 on ubuntu
22.04 which is the latest version of ubuntu runner image for github
actions.
By checking each version from [1], p4d version 21.1 and above can work
properly on ubuntu 22.04. But version 22.x will break some p4 test
cases. So p4 version 21.x is exactly the version we can use.
With this update, the versions of p4 for Linux and macOS happen to be
the same. So we can add the version number directly into the "P4WHENCE"
variable, and reuse it in p4 installation for macOS.
By removing the "LINUX_P4_VERSION" variable from "ci/lib.sh", the
comment left above has nothing to do with p4, but still applies to
git-lfs. Since we have a fixed version of git-lfs installed on Linux,
we may have a different version on macOS.
[1]: https://cdist2.perforce.com/perforce/
Reviewed-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de> Helped-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <zhiyou.jx@alibaba-inc.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Jiang Xin [Fri, 25 Nov 2022 09:59:52 +0000 (17:59 +0800)]
ci: remove the pipe after "p4 -V" to catch errors
When installing p4 as a dependency, we used to pipe output of "p4 -V"
and "p4d -V" to validate the installation and output a condensed version
information. But this would hide potential errors of p4 and would stop
with an empty output. E.g.: p4d version 16.2 running on ubuntu 22.04
causes sigfaults, even before it produces any output.
By removing the pipe after "p4 -V" and "p4d -V", we may get a
verbose output, and stop immediately on errors because we have "set
-e" in "ci/lib.sh". Since we won't look at these trace logs unless
something fails, just including the raw output seems most sensible.
Reviewed-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de> Helped-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <zhiyou.jx@alibaba-inc.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Jiang Xin [Fri, 25 Nov 2022 09:59:51 +0000 (17:59 +0800)]
github-actions: run gcc-8 on ubuntu-20.04 image
GitHub starts to upgrade its runner image "ubuntu-latest" from version
"ubuntu-20.04" to version "ubuntu-22.04". It will fail to find and
install "gcc-8" package on the new runner image.
Change the runner image of the `linux-gcc` job from "ubuntu-latest" to
"ubuntu-20.04" in order to install "gcc-8" as a dependency.
Reviewed-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de> Helped-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <zhiyou.jx@alibaba-inc.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Git for Windows' SDK recently upgraded to GCC v12.x which points out
that the `pos` variable might be used even after the corresponding
memory was `realloc()`ed and therefore potentially no longer valid.
Since a subset of this SDK is used in Git's CI/PR builds, we need to fix
this to continue to be able to benefit from the CI/PR runs.
Note: This bug has been with us since 2a6b149c64f6 (mingw: avoid using
strbuf in syslog, 2011-10-06), and while it looks tempting to replace
the hand-rolled string manipulation with a `strbuf`-based one, that
commit's message explains why we cannot do that: The `syslog()` function
is called as part of the function in `daemon.c` which is set as the
`die()` routine, and since `strbuf_grow()` can call that function if it
runs out of memory, this would cause a nasty infinite loop that we do
not want to re-introduce.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Jeff King [Thu, 23 Feb 2023 11:08:41 +0000 (06:08 -0500)]
t5559: make SSL/TLS the default
The point of t5559 is run the regular t5551 tests with HTTP/2. But it
does so with the "h2c" protocol, which uses cleartext upgrades from
HTTP/1.1 to HTTP/2 (rather than learning about HTTP/2 support during the
TLS negotiation).
This has a few problems:
- it's not very indicative of the real world. In practice, most servers
that support HTTP/2 will also support TLS.
- support for upgrading does not seem as robust. In particular, we've
run into bugs in some versions of Apache's mod_http2 that trigger
only with the upgrade mode. See:
So the upside is that this change makes our HTTP/2 tests more robust and
more realistic. The downside is that if we can't set up SSL for any
reason, we'll skip the tests (even though you _might_ have been able to
run the HTTP/2 tests the old way). We could probably have a conditional
fallback, but it would be complicated for little gain, and it's not even
clear it would help (i.e., would any test environment even have HTTP/2
but not SSL support?).
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Jeff King [Thu, 23 Feb 2023 11:07:29 +0000 (06:07 -0500)]
t5559: fix test failures with LIB_HTTPD_SSL
One test needs to be tweaked in order for t5559 to pass with SSL/TLS set
up. When we make our initial clone, we check that the curl trace of
requests is what we expected. But we need to fix two things:
- along with ignoring "data" lines from the trace, we need to ignore
"SSL data" lines
- when TLS is used, the server is able to tell the client (via ALPN)
that it supports HTTP/2 before the first HTTP request is made. So
rather than request an upgrade using an HTTP header, it can just
speak HTTP/2 immediately
With this patch, running:
LIB_HTTPD_SSL=1 ./t5559-http-fetch-smart-http2.sh
works, whereas it did not before.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Jeff King [Thu, 23 Feb 2023 11:06:44 +0000 (06:06 -0500)]
t/lib-httpd: enable HTTP/2 "h2" protocol, not just h2c
Commit 73c49a4474 (t: run t5551 tests with both HTTP and HTTP/2,
2022-11-11) added Apache config to enable HTTP/2. However, it only
enabled the "h2c" protocol, which allows cleartext HTTP/2 (generally
based on an upgrade header during an HTTP/1.1 request). This is what
t5559 is generally testing, since by default we don't set up SSL/TLS.
However, it should be possible to run t5559 with LIB_HTTPD_SSL set. In
that case, Apache will advertise support for HTTP/2 via ALPN during the
TLS handshake. But we need to tell it support "h2" (the non-cleartext
version) to do so. Without that, then curl does not even try to do the
HTTP/1.1 upgrade (presumably because after seeing that we did TLS but
didn't get the ALPN indicator, it assumes it would be fruitless).
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Jeff King [Thu, 23 Feb 2023 11:05:55 +0000 (06:05 -0500)]
t/lib-httpd: respect $HTTPD_PROTO in expect_askpass()
When the HTTP tests are run with LIB_HTTPD_SSL in the environment, then
we access the test server as https://. This causes expect_askpass to
complain, because it tries to blindly match "http://" in the prompt
shown to the user. We can adjust this to use $HTTPD_PROTO, which is set
during the setup phase.
Note that this is enough for t5551 and t5559 to pass when run with
https, but there are similar problems in other scripts that will need to
be fixed before the whole suite can run with LIB_HTTPD_SSL.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Jeff King [Thu, 23 Feb 2023 11:05:07 +0000 (06:05 -0500)]
t5551: drop curl trace lines without headers
We pick apart a curl trace, looking for "=> Send header:" and so on, and
matching against an expected set of requests and responses. We remove
"== Info" lines entirely. However, our parser is fooled when running the
test with LIB_HTTPD_SSL on Ubuntu 20.04 (as found in our linux-gcc CI
job), as curl hands us an "Info" buffer with a newline, and we get:
which results in the "CApath" line ending up in the cleaned-up output,
causing the test to fail.
Arguably the tracing code should detect this and put it on two separate
"== Info" lines. But this is actually a curl bug, fixed by their 80d73bcca (tls: provide the CApath verbose log on its own line,
2020-08-18). It's simpler to just work around it here.
Since we are using GIT_TRACE_CURL, every line should just start with one
of "<=", "==", or "=>", and we can throw away anything else. In fact, we
can just replace the pattern for deleting "*" lines. Those were from the
old GIT_CURL_VERBOSE output, but we switched over in 14e24114d9
(t5551-http-fetch-smart.sh: use the GIT_TRACE_CURL environment var,
2016-09-05).
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Jeff King [Thu, 23 Feb 2023 11:02:31 +0000 (06:02 -0500)]
t5551: handle v2 protocol in cookie test
After making a request, we check that it stored the expected cookies.
This depends on the protocol version, because the cookies we store
depend on the exact requests we made (and for ls-remote, v2 will always
hit /git-upload-pack to get the refs, whereas v0 is happy with the
initial ref advertisement).
As a result, hardly anybody runs this test, as you'd have to manually
set GIT_TEST_PROTOCOL_VERSION=0 to do so.
Let's teach it to handle both protocol versions. One way to do this
would be to make the expectation conditional on the protocol used. But
there's a simpler solution. The reason that v0 doesn't hit
/git-upload-pack is that ls-remote doesn't fetch any objects. If we
instead do a fetch (making sure there's an actual object to grab), then
both v0 and v2 will hit the same endpoints and set the same cookies.
Note that we do have to clean up our new tag here; otherwise it confuses
the later "clone 2,000 tags" test.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Jeff King [Thu, 23 Feb 2023 11:01:31 +0000 (06:01 -0500)]
t5551: simplify expected cookie file
After making an HTTP request that should store cookies, we check that
the expected values are in the cookie file. We don't want to look at the
whole file, because it has noisy comments at the top that we shouldn't
depend on. But we strip out the interesting bits using "tail -3", which
is brittle. It requires us to put an extra blank line in our expected
output, and it would fail to notice any reordering or extra content in
the cookie file.
Instead, let's just grep for non-blank lines that are not comments,
which more directly describes what we're interested in.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Jeff King [Thu, 23 Feb 2023 11:00:38 +0000 (06:00 -0500)]
t5551: handle v2 protocol in upload-pack service test
We perform a clone and a fetch, and then check that we saw the expected
requests in Apache's access log. In the v2 protocol, there will be one
extra request to /git-upload-pack for each operation (since the initial
/info/refs probe is just used to upgrade the protocol).
As a result, this test is a noop unless the use of the v0 protocol is
forced. Which means that hardly anybody runs it, since you have to do so
manually.
Let's update it to handle v2 and run it always. We could do this by just
conditionally adding in the extra POST lines. But if we look at the
origin of the test in 7da4e2280c (test smart http fetch and push,
2009-10-30), the point is really just to make sure that the smart
git-upload-pack service was used at all. So rather than counting up the
individual requests, let's just make sure we saw each of the expected
types. This is a bit looser, but makes maintenance easier.
Since we're now matching with grep, we can also loosen the HTTP/1.1
match, which allows this test to pass when run with HTTP/2 via t5559.
That lets:
Jeff King [Thu, 23 Feb 2023 10:59:00 +0000 (05:59 -0500)]
t5551: handle v2 protocol when checking curl trace
After cloning an http repository, we check the curl trace to make sure
the expected requests were made. But since the expected trace was never
updated to handle v2, it is only run when you ask the test suite to run
in v0 mode (which hardly anybody does).
Let's update it to handle both protocols. This isn't too hard since v2
just sends an extra header and an extra request. So we can just annotate
those extra lines and strip them out for v0 (and drop the annotations
for v2). I didn't bother handling v1 here, as it's not really of
practical interest (it would drop the extra v2 request, but still have
the "git-protocol" lines).
There's a similar tweak needed at the end. Since we check the
"accept-encoding" value loosely, we grep for it rather than finding it
in the verbatim trace. This grep insists that there are exactly 2
matches, but of course in v2 with the extra request there are 3. We
could tweak the number, but it's simpler still to just check that we saw
at least one match. The verbatim check already confirmed how many
instances of the header we have; we're really just checking here that
"gzip" is in the value (it's possible, of course, that the headers could
have different values, but that seems like an unlikely bug).
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Jeff King [Thu, 23 Feb 2023 10:57:27 +0000 (05:57 -0500)]
t5551: stop forcing clone to run with v0 protocol
In the "clone http repository" test, we check the curl trace to make
sure the expected requests were made. This whole script was marked to
handle only the v0 protocol in d790ee1707 (tests: fix protocol version
for overspecifications, 2019-02-25). That makes sense, since v2 requires
an extra request, so tests as specific as this would fail unless
modified.
Later, in preparation for v2 becoming the default, this was tweaked by 8a1b0978ab (test: request GIT_TEST_PROTOCOL_VERSION=0 when appropriate,
2019-12-23). There we run the trace check only if the user has
explicitly asked to test protocol version 0. But it also forced the
clone itself to run with the v0 protocol.
This makes the check for "can we expect a v0 trace" silly; it will
always be v0. But much worse, it means that the clone we are testing is
not like the one that normal users would run. They would use the
defaults, which are now v2. And since this is supposed to be a basic
check of clone-over-http, we should do the same.
Let's fix this by dropping the extra v0 override. The test still passes
because the trace checking only kicks in if we asked to use v0
explicitly (this is the same as before; even though we were running a v0
clone, unless you specifically set GIT_TEST_PROTOCOL_VERSION=0, the
trace check was always skipped).
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Jeff King [Thu, 23 Feb 2023 10:56:17 +0000 (05:56 -0500)]
t5551: handle HTTP/2 when checking curl trace
We check that the curl trace of a clone has the lines we expect, but
this won't work when we run the test under t5559, because a few details
are different under HTTP/2 (but nobody noticed because it only happens
when you manually set GIT_TEST_PROTOCOL_VERSION to "0").
We can handle both HTTP protocols with a few tweaks:
- we'll drop the HTTP "101 Switching Protocols" response, as well as
various protocol upgrade headers. These details aren't interesting
to us. We just want to make sure the correct protocol was used (and
we do in the main request/response lines).
- successful HTTP/2 responses just say "200" and not "200 OK"; we can
normalize these
- replace HTTP/1.1 with a variable in the request/response lines. We
can use the existing $HTTP_PROTO for this, as it's already set to
"HTTP/2" when appropriate. We do need to tweak the fallback value to
"HTTP/1.1" to match what curl will write (prior to this patch, the
fallback value didn't matter at all; we only checked if it was the
literal string "HTTP/2").
Note that several lines still expect HTTP/1.1 unconditionally. The first
request does so because the client requests an upgrade during the
request. The POST request and response do so because you can't do an
upgrade if there is a request body. (This will all be different if we
trigger HTTP/2 via ALPN, but the tests aren't yet capable of that).
Jeff King [Thu, 23 Feb 2023 10:54:02 +0000 (05:54 -0500)]
t5551: lower-case headers in expected curl trace
There's a test in t5551 which checks the curl trace (after simplifying
it a bit). It doesn't work with HTTP/2, because in that case curl
outputs all of the headers in lower-case. Even though this test is run
with HTTP/2 by t5559, nobody has noticed because checking the trace only
happens if GIT_TEST_PROTOCOL_VERSION is manually set to "0".
Let's fix this by lower-casing all of the header names in the trace, and
then checking for those in our expected code (this is easier than making
HTTP/2 traces look like HTTP/1.1, since HTTP/1.1 uses title-casing).
Sadly, we can't quite do this in our existing sed script. This works if
you have GNU sed:
s/^\\([><]\\) \\([A-Za-z0-9-]*:\\)/\1 \L\2\E/
but \L is a GNU-ism, and I don't think there's a portable solution. We
could just "tr A-Z a-z" on the way in, of course, but that makes the
non-header parts harder to read (e.g., lowercase "post" requests). But
to paraphrase Baron Munchausen, I have learned from experience that a
modicum of Perl can be most efficacious.
Note that this doesn't quite get the test passing with t5559; there are
more fixes needed on top.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Jeff King [Thu, 23 Feb 2023 10:52:10 +0000 (05:52 -0500)]
t5551: drop redundant grep for Accept-Language
Commit b0c4adcdd7 (remote-curl: send Accept-Language header to server,
2022-07-11) added tests to make sure the header is sent via HTTP.
However, it checks in two places:
1. In the expected trace output, we check verbatim for the header and
its value.
2. Afterwards, we grep for the header again in the trace file.
This (2) is probably cargo-culted from the earlier grep for
Accept-Encoding. It is needed for the encoding because we smudge the
value of that header when doing the verbatim check; see 1a53e692af
(remote-curl: accept all encodings supported by curl, 2018-05-22).
But we don't do so for the language header, so any problem that the
"grep" would catch in (2) would already have been caught by (1).
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Jeff King [Thu, 23 Feb 2023 10:51:35 +0000 (05:51 -0500)]
t5541: simplify and move "no empty path components" test
Commit 9ee6bcd398 (t5541-http-push: add test for URLs with trailing
slash, 2010-04-08) added a test that clones a URL with a trailing slash,
and confirms that we don't send a doubled slash (like "$url//info/refs")
to the server.
But this test makes no sense in t5541, which is about pushing. It should
have been added in t5551. Let's move it there.
But putting it at the end is tricky, since it checks the entire contents
of the Apache access log. We could get around this by clearing the log
before our test. But there's an even simpler solution: just make sure no
doubled slashes appear in the log (fortunately, "http://" does not
appear in the log itself).
As a bonus, this also lets us drop the check for the v0 protocol (which
is otherwise necessary since v2 makes multiple requests, and
check_access_log insists on exactly matching the number of requests,
even though we don't care about that here).
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Jeff King [Thu, 23 Feb 2023 10:50:36 +0000 (05:50 -0500)]
t5541: stop marking "used receive-pack service" test as v0 only
We have a test which checks to see if a request to git-receive-pack was
made. Originally, it was checking the entire set of requests made in the
script so far, including clones, and thus it would break when run with
the v2 protocol (since that implies an extra request for fetches).
Since the previous commit, though, we are only checking the requests
made by a single push. And since there is no v2 push protocol, the test
now passes no matter what's in GIT_TEST_PROTOCOL_VERSION. We can just
run it all the time.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Jeff King [Thu, 23 Feb 2023 10:49:47 +0000 (05:49 -0500)]
t5541: run "used receive-pack service" test earlier
There's a test in t5541 that confirms that "git push" makes two requests
(a GET to /info/refs, and a POST to /git-receive-pack). However, it's a
noop unless GIT_TEST_PROTOCOL_VERSION is set to "0", due to 8a1b0978ab
(test: request GIT_TEST_PROTOCOL_VERSION=0 when appropriate,
2019-12-23).
This means that almost nobody runs it. And indeed, it has been broken
since b0c4adcdd7 (remote-curl: send Accept-Language header to server,
2022-07-11). But the fault is not in that commit, but in how brittle the
test is. It runs after several operations have been performed, which
means that it expects to see the complete set of requests made so far in
the script. Commit b0c4adcdd7 added a new test, which means that the
"used receive-pack service" test must be updated, too.
Let's fix this by making the test less brittle. We'll move it higher in
the script, right after the first push has completed. And we'll clear
the access log right before doing the push, so we'll see only the
requests from that command.
This is technically testing less, in that we won't check that all of
those other requests also correctly used smart http. But there's no
particular reason think that if the first one did, the others wouldn't.