The function `files_fsck_refs()` only has a single callsite and forwards
all of its arguments as-is, so it's basically a useless indirection.
Inline the function call.
While at it, also remove the bitwise or that we have for return values.
We don't really want to or them at all, but rather just want to return
an error in case either of the functions has failed.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The parameter `refs_check_dir` determines which directory we want to
check references for. But as we always want to check the complete
refs hierarchy, this parameter is always set to "refs".
Drop the parameter and hardcode it.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When performing consistency checks we pass the functions that perform
the verification down the calling stack. This is somewhat unnecessary
though, as the set of functions doesn't ever change.
Simplify the code by moving the array into global scope and remove the
parameter.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When iterating through root refs we first need to determine the
directory in which the refs live. This is done by retrieving the root of
the loose refs via `refs->loose->root->name`, and putting it through
`files_ref_path()` to derive the final path.
This is somewhat redundant though: the root name of the loose files
cache is always going to be the empty string. As such, we always end up
passing that empty string to `files_ref_path()` as the ref hierarchy we
want to start. And this actually makes sense: `files_ref_path()` already
computes the location of the root directory, so of course we need to
pass the empty string for the ref hierarchy itself. So going via the
loose ref cache to figure out that the root of a ref hierarchy is empty
is only causing confusion.
But next to the added confusion, it can also lead to a segfault. The
loose ref cache is populated lazily, so it may not always be set. It
seems to be sheer luck that this is a condition we do not currently hit.
The right thing to do would be to call `get_loose_ref_cache()`, which
knows to populate the cache if required.
Simplify the code and fix the potential segfault by simply removing the
indirection via the loose ref cache completely.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Junio C Hamano [Thu, 8 Jan 2026 07:40:12 +0000 (16:40 +0900)]
Merge branch 'en/ort-recursive-d-f-conflict-fix'
The ort merge machinery hit an assertion failure in a history with
criss-cross merges renamed a directory and a non-directory, which
has been corrected.
* en/ort-recursive-d-f-conflict-fix:
merge-ort: fix corner case recursive submodule/directory conflict handling
Running "git diff" with "--name-only" and other options that allows
us not to look at the blob contents, while objects that are lazily
fetched from a promisor remote, caused use-after-free, which has
been corrected.
* ds/diff-lazy-fetch-with-name-only-fix:
diff: avoid segfault with freed entries
Junio C Hamano [Thu, 8 Jan 2026 07:40:11 +0000 (16:40 +0900)]
Merge branch 'rs/tag-wo-the-repository'
Code clean-up.
* rs/tag-wo-the-repository:
tag: stop using the_repository
tag: support arbitrary repositories in parse_tag()
tag: support arbitrary repositories in gpg_verify_tag()
tag: use algo of repo parameter in parse_tag_buffer()
Junio C Hamano [Tue, 6 Jan 2026 07:33:53 +0000 (16:33 +0900)]
Merge branch 'ar/run-command-hook'
Use hook API to replace ad-hoc invocation of hook scripts with the
run_command() API.
* ar/run-command-hook:
receive-pack: convert receive hooks to hook API
receive-pack: convert update hooks to new API
hooks: allow callers to capture output
run-command: allow capturing of collated output
hook: allow overriding the ungroup option
reference-transaction: use hook API instead of run-command
transport: convert pre-push to hook API
hook: convert 'post-rewrite' hook in sequencer.c to hook API
hook: provide stdin via callback
run-command: add stdin callback for parallelization
run-command: add first helper for pp child states
Junio C Hamano [Tue, 30 Dec 2025 03:58:19 +0000 (12:58 +0900)]
Merge branch 'ps/repack-avoid-noop-midx-rewrite'
Even when there is no changes in the packfile and no need to
recompute bitmaps, "git repack" recomputed and updated the MIDX
file, which has been corrected.
* ps/repack-avoid-noop-midx-rewrite:
midx-write: skip rewriting MIDX with `--stdin-packs` unless needed
midx-write: extract function to test whether MIDX needs updating
midx: fix `BUG()` when getting preferred pack without a reverse index
Junio C Hamano [Tue, 30 Dec 2025 03:58:19 +0000 (12:58 +0900)]
Merge branch 'js/test-symlink-windows'
Prepare test suite for Git for Windows that supports symbolic
links.
* js/test-symlink-windows:
t7800: work around the MSYS path conversion on Windows
t6423: introduce Windows-specific handling for symlinking to /dev/null
t1305: skip symlink tests that do not apply to Windows
t1006: accommodate for symlink support in MSYS2
t0600: fix incomplete prerequisite for a test case
t0301: another fix for Windows compatibility
t0001: handle `diff --no-index` gracefully
mingw: special-case `open(symlink, O_CREAT | O_EXCL)`
apply: symbolic links lack a "trustable executable bit"
t9700: accommodate for Windows paths
Junio C Hamano [Tue, 30 Dec 2025 03:58:19 +0000 (12:58 +0900)]
Merge branch 'jt/repo-struct-more-objinfo'
More object database related information are shown in "git repo
structure" output.
* jt/repo-struct-more-objinfo:
builtin/repo: add object disk size info to structure table
builtin/repo: add disk size info to keyvalue stucture output
builtin/repo: add inflated object info to structure table
builtin/repo: add inflated object info to keyvalue structure output
builtin/repo: humanise count values in structure output
strbuf: split out logic to humanise byte values
builtin/repo: group per-type object values into struct
Derrick Stolee [Mon, 29 Dec 2025 21:44:57 +0000 (21:44 +0000)]
diff: avoid segfault with freed entries
When computing a diff in a partial clone, there is a chance that we
could trigger a prefetch of missing objects at the same time as we are
freeing entries from the global diff queue. This is difficult to
reproduce, as we need to have some objects be freed from the queue
before triggering the prefetch of missing objects. There is a new test
in t4067 that does trigger the segmentation fault that results in this
case.
The fix is to set the queue pointer to NULL after it is freed, and then
to be careful about NULL values in the prefetch.
The more elaborate explanation is that within diffcore_std(), we may
skip the initial prefetch due to the output format (--name-only in the
test) and go straight to diffcore_skip_stat_unmatch(). In that method,
the index entries that have been invalidated by path changes show up as
entries but may be deleted because they are not actually content diffs
and only newer timestamps than expected. As those entries are deleted,
later entries are checked with diff_filespec_check_stat_unmatch(), which
uses diff_queued_diff_prefetch() as the missing_object_cb in its diff
options. That can trigger downloading missing objects if the appropriate
scenario occurs to trigger a call to diff_popoulate_filespec(). It's
finally within that callback to diff_queued_diff_prefetch() that the
segfault occurs.
The test was hard to find because it required some real differences,
some not-different files that had a newer modified time, and the order
of those files alphabetically was important to trigger the deletion
before the prefetch was triggered.
I briefly considered a "lock" member for the diff queue, but it was a
much larger diff and introduced many more possible error scenarios.
Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Deveshi Dwivedi [Mon, 29 Dec 2025 18:57:37 +0000 (18:57 +0000)]
t5403: use test_path_is_file instead of test -f
Replace 'test -f' with the test_path_is_file in
t5403-post-checkout-hook.sh. This helper provides better error
messages when tests fail, making it easier to debug issues.
Signed-off-by: Deveshi Dwivedi <deveshigurgaon@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
While these may look similar to both a562d90a350d (merge-ort: fix failing merges in special corner case,
2025-11-03)
and f6ecb603ff8a (merge-ort: fix directory rename on top of source of other
rename/delete, 2025-08-06)
the cause is different and in this case the problem is not an
over-conservative assertion, but a bug before the assertion where we did
not update all relevant state appropriately.
It sadly took me a really long time to figure out how to get a simple
reproducer for this one. It doesn't really have that many moving parts,
but there are multiple pieces of background information needed to
understand it.
First of all, when we have two files added at the same path, merge-ort
does a two-way merge of those files. If we have two directories added
at the same path, we basically do the same thing (taking the union of
files, and two-way merging files with the same name). But two-way
merging requires components of the same type. We can't merge the
contents of a regular file with a directory, or with a symlink, or with
a submodule. Nor can any of those other types be merged with each
other, e.g. merging a submodule with a directory is a bad idea. When
two paths have the same name but their types do not match, merge-ort is
forced to move one of them to an alternate filename (using the
unique_path() function).
Second, if two commits being merged have more than one merge-base,
merge-ort will merge the merge-bases to create a virtual merge-base, and
use that as the base commit.
Third, one of the really important optimizations in merge-ort is trivial
tree-level resolution (roughly meaning merging trees without recursing
into them). This optimization has some nuance to it that is important
to the current bug, and to understand it, it helps to first look at the
high-level overview of how merge-ort runs; there are basically three
high-level functions that the work is divided between:
collect_merge_info() - walks the top-level trees getting individual
paths of interest
detect_renames() - detect renames between paths in order to match up
paths for three-way merging
process_entries() - does a few things of interest:
* three-way merging of files,
* other special handling (e.g. adjusting paths with conflicting
types to avoid path collisions)
* as it finishes handling all the files within a subdirectory,
writes out a new tree object for that directory
If it were not for renames, we could just always do tree-level merging
whenever the tree on at least one side was unmodified. Unfortunately,
we need to recurse into trees to determine whether there are renames.
However, we can also do tree-level merging so long as there aren't any
*relevant* renames (another merge-ort optimization), which we can
determine without recursing into trees.
We would also be able to do tree-level merging if we somehow apriori
knew what renames existed, by only recursing into the trees which we
could otherwise trivially merge if they contained files involved in
renames. That might not seem useful, because we need to find out the
renames and we have to recurse into trees to do so, but when you find
out that the process_entries() step is more computationally expensive
than the collect_merge_info() step, it yields an interesting strategy:
* run collect_merge_info()
* run detect_renames()
* cache the renames()
* restart -- rerun collect_merge_info(), using the cached renames to
only recurse into the needed trees
* we already have the renames cached so no need to re-detect
* run process_entries() on the reduced list of paths
which was implemented back in 7bee6c100431 (merge-ort: avoid recursing
into directories when we don't need to, 2021-07-16) Crucially, this
restarting only occurs if the number of paths we could skip recursing
into exceeds the number we still need to recurse into by some safety
factor (wanted_factor in handle_deferred_entries()); forgetting this
fact is a great way to repeatedly fail to create a minimal testcase for
several days and go down alternate wrong paths).
Now, I earlier summarized this optimization as "merging trees without
recursing into them", but this optimization does not require that all
three sides of history has a directory at a given path. So long as the
tree on one side matches the tree in the base version, we can decide to
resolve in favor of whatever the other side of history has at that path
-- be it a directory, a file, a submodule, or a symlink. Unfortunately,
the code in question didn't fully realize this, and was written assuming
the base version and both sides would have a directory at the given
path, as can be seen by the "ci->filemask == 0" comment in
resolve_trivial_directory_merge() that was added as part of 7bee6c100431
(merge-ort: avoid recursing into directories when we don't need to,
2021-07-16). A few additional lines of code are needed to handle cases
where we have something other than a directory on the other side of
history.
But, knowing that resolve_trivial_directory_merge() doesn't have
sufficient state updating logic doesn't show us how to trigger a bug
without combining with the other bits of information we provided above.
Here's a relevant testcase:
* branches A & B
* commit A1: adds "folder" as a directory with files tracked under it
* commit B1: adds "folder" as a submodule
* commit A2: merges B1 into A1, keeping "folder" as a directory
(and in fact, with no changes to "folder" since A1), discarding the
submodule
* commit B2: merges A1 into B1, keeping "folder" as a submodule
(and in fact, with no changes to "folder" since B1), discarding the
directory
Here, if we try to merge A2 & B2, the logic proceeds as follows:
* we have multiple merge-bases: A1 & B1. So we have to merge those
to get a virtual merge base.
* due to "folder" as a directory and "folder" as a submodule, the
path collision logic triggers and renames "folder" as a submodule
to "folder~Temporary merge branch 2" so we can keep it alongside
"folder" as a directory.
* we now have a virtual merge base (containing both "folder"
directory and a "folder~Temporary merge branch 2" submodule) and
can now do the outer merge
* in the first step of the outer merge, we attempt to defer recursing
into folder/ as a directory, but find we need to for rename
detection.
* in rename detection, we note that "folder~Temporary merge branch 2"
has the same hash as "folder" as a submodule in B2, which means we
have an exact rename.
* after rename detection, we discover no path in folder/ is needed
for renames, and so we can cache renames and restart.
* after restarting, we avoid recursing into "folder/" and realize we
can resolve it trivially since it hasn't been modified. The
resolution removes "folder/", leaving us only "folder" as a
submodule from commit B2.
* After this point, we should have a rename/delete conflict on
"folder~Temporary merge branch 2" -> "folder", but our marking of
the merge of "folder" as clean broke our ability to handle that and
in fact triggers an assertion in process_renames().
When there was a df_conflict (directory/"file" conflict, where "file"
could be submodule or regular file or symlink), ensure
resolve_trivial_directory_merge() handles it properly. In particular:
* do not pre-emptively mark the path as cleanly merged if the
remaining path is a file; allow it to be processed in
process_entries() later to determine if it was clean
* clear the parts of dirmask or filemask corresponding to the matching
sides of history, since we are resolving those away
* clear the df_conflict bit afterwards; since we cleared away the two
matching sides and only have one side left, that one side can't
have a directory/file conflict with itself.
Also add the above minimal testcase showcasing this bug to t6422, **with
a sufficient number of paths under the folder/ directory to actually
trigger it**. (I wish I could have all those days back from all the
wrong paths I went down due to not having enough files under that
directory...)
I know this commit has a very high ratio of lines in the commit message
to lines of comments, and a relatively high ratio of comments to actual
code, but given how long it took me to track down, on the off chance
that we ever need to further modify this logic, I wanted it thoroughly
documented for future me and for whatever other poor soul might end up
needing to read this commit message.
Signed-off-by: Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
gpg_verify_tag() shows the passed in object name on error. Both callers
provide one. It falls back to abbreviated hashes for future callers
that pass in a NULL name. DEFAULT_ABBREV is default_abbrev, which in
turn is a global variable that's populated by git_default_config() and
only available with USE_THE_REPOSITORY_VARIABLE.
Don't let that hypothetical hold us back from getting rid of
the_repository in tag.c. Fall back to full hashes, which are more
appropriate for error messages anyway. This allows us to stop setting
USE_THE_REPOSITORY_VARIABLE.
tag: support arbitrary repositories in parse_tag()
Allow callers of parse_tag() pass in the repository to use. Let most of
them pass in the_repository to get the same result as before. One of
them has stopped using the_repository in ef9b0370da (sha1-name.c: store
and use repo in struct disambiguate_state, 2019-04-16); let it pass in
its stored repository.
tag: support arbitrary repositories in gpg_verify_tag()
Allow callers of gpg_verify_tag() specify the repository to use by
providing a parameter for that. One of the two has not been using
the_repository since 43a8391977 (builtin/verify-tag: stop using
`the_repository`, 2025-03-08); let it pass in the correct repository.
The other simply passes the_repository to get the same result as before.
tag: use algo of repo parameter in parse_tag_buffer()
Stop using "the_hash_algo" explicitly and implictly via parse_oid_hex()
and instead use the "hash_algo" member of the passed in repository,
which is more correct.
Junio C Hamano [Sun, 28 Dec 2025 08:36:16 +0000 (17:36 +0900)]
Merge branch 'ap/packfile-promisor-object-optim'
The code path that enumerates promisor objects have been optimized
to skip pointlessly parsing blob objects.
* ap/packfile-promisor-object-optim:
packfile: skip hash checks in add_promisor_object()
object: apply skip_hash and discard_tree optimizations to unknown blobs too
config: use git_parse_int() in git_config_get_expiry_in_days()
git_config_get_expiry_in_days() calls git_parse_signed() with the
maximum value of int, which is equivalent to calling git_parse_int().
Do that instead, as its shorter and clearer.
This requires demoting "days" to int to match. Promote "scale" to
intmax_t in turn to arrive at the same result when multiplying them.
Emily Shaffer [Fri, 26 Dec 2025 12:23:34 +0000 (14:23 +0200)]
receive-pack: convert receive hooks to hook API
This converts the last remaining hooks to the new hook API, for
the same benefits as the previous conversions (no need to toggle
signals, manage custom struct child_process, call find_hook(),
prepares for specifyinig hooks via configs, etc.).
I noticed a performance degradation when processing large amounts
of hook input with just 1 line per callback, due to run-command's
poll loop, therefore I batched 500 lines per callback, to ensure
similar pipe throughput as before and to avoid hook child waiting
on stdin.
Signed-off-by: Emily Shaffer <emilyshaffer@google.com> Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Adrian Ratiu <adrian.ratiu@collabora.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Emily Shaffer [Fri, 26 Dec 2025 12:23:33 +0000 (14:23 +0200)]
receive-pack: convert update hooks to new API
Use the new hook sideband API introduced in the previous commit.
The hook API avoids creating a custom struct child_process and other
internal hook plumbing (e.g. calling find_hook()) and prepares for
the specification of hooks via configs or running parallel hooks.
Execution is still sequential through the current hook.[ch] via the
run_process_parallel_opts.processes=1 arg.
Signed-off-by: Emily Shaffer <emilyshaffer@google.com> Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Adrian Ratiu <adrian.ratiu@collabora.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Emily Shaffer [Fri, 26 Dec 2025 12:23:31 +0000 (14:23 +0200)]
run-command: allow capturing of collated output
Some callers, for example server-side hooks which wish to relay hook
output to clients across a transport, want to capture what would
normally print to stderr and do something else with it. Allow that via a
callback.
By calling the callback regardless of whether there's output available,
we allow clients to send e.g. a keepalive if necessary.
Because we expose a strbuf, not a fd or FILE*, there's no need to create
a temporary pipe or similar - we can just skip the print to stderr and
instead hand it to the caller.
Signed-off-by: Emily Shaffer <emilyshaffer@google.com> Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Adrian Ratiu <adrian.ratiu@collabora.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Adrian Ratiu [Fri, 26 Dec 2025 12:23:30 +0000 (14:23 +0200)]
hook: allow overriding the ungroup option
When calling run_process_parallel() in run_hooks_opt(), the
ungroup option is currently hardcoded to .ungroup = 1.
This causes problems when ungrouping should be disabled, for
example when sideband-reading collated output from child hooks,
because sideband-reading and ungrouping are mutually exclusive.
Thus a new hook.h option is added to allow overriding.
The existing ungroup=1 behavior is preserved in the run_hooks()
API and the "hook run" command. We could modify these to take
an option if necessary, so I added two code comments there.
Signed-off-by: Adrian Ratiu <adrian.ratiu@collabora.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Adrian Ratiu [Fri, 26 Dec 2025 12:23:29 +0000 (14:23 +0200)]
reference-transaction: use hook API instead of run-command
Convert the reference-transaction hook to the new hook API,
so it doesn't need to set up a struct child_process, call
find_hook or toggle the pipe signals.
The stdin feed callback is processing one ref update per
call. I haven't noticed any performance degradation due
to this, however we can batch as many we want in each call,
to ensure a good pipe throughtput (i.e. the child does not
wait after stdin).
Helped-by: Emily Shaffer <nasamuffin@google.com> Signed-off-by: Emily Shaffer <emilyshaffer@google.com> Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Adrian Ratiu <adrian.ratiu@collabora.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Emily Shaffer [Fri, 26 Dec 2025 12:23:28 +0000 (14:23 +0200)]
transport: convert pre-push to hook API
Move the pre-push hook from custom run-command invocations to
the new hook API which doesn't require a custom child_process
structure and signal toggling.
Signed-off-by: Emily Shaffer <emilyshaffer@google.com> Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Adrian Ratiu <adrian.ratiu@collabora.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Emily Shaffer [Fri, 26 Dec 2025 12:23:27 +0000 (14:23 +0200)]
hook: convert 'post-rewrite' hook in sequencer.c to hook API
Replace the custom run-command calls used by post-rewrite with
the newer and simpler hook_run_opt(), which does not need to
create a custom 'struct child_process' or call find_hook().
Another benefit of using the hook API is that hook_run_opt()
handles the SIGPIPE toggle logic.
Signed-off-by: Emily Shaffer <emilyshaffer@google.com> Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Adrian Ratiu <adrian.ratiu@collabora.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Emily Shaffer [Fri, 26 Dec 2025 12:23:26 +0000 (14:23 +0200)]
hook: provide stdin via callback
This adds a callback mechanism for feeding stdin to hooks alongside
the existing path_to_stdin (which slurps a file's content to stdin).
The advantage of this new callback is that it can feed stdin without
going through the FS layer. This helps when feeding large amount of
data and uses the run-command parallel stdin callback introduced in
the preceding commit.
Signed-off-by: Emily Shaffer <emilyshaffer@google.com> Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Adrian Ratiu <adrian.ratiu@collabora.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Emily Shaffer [Fri, 26 Dec 2025 12:23:25 +0000 (14:23 +0200)]
run-command: add stdin callback for parallelization
If a user of the run_processes_parallel() API wants to pipe a large
amount of information to the stdin of each parallel command, that
data could exceed the pipe buffer of the process's stdin and can be
too big to store in-memory via strbuf & friends or to slurp to a file.
Generally this is solved by repeatedly writing to child_process.in
between calls to start_command() and finish_command(). For a specific
pre-existing example of this, see transport.c:run_pre_push_hook().
This adds a generic callback API to run_processes_parallel() to do
exactly that in a unified manner, similar to the existing callback APIs,
which can then be used by hooks.h to convert the remaining hooks to the
new, simpler parallel interface.
Signed-off-by: Emily Shaffer <emilyshaffer@google.com> Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Adrian Ratiu <adrian.ratiu@collabora.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Adrian Ratiu [Fri, 26 Dec 2025 12:23:24 +0000 (14:23 +0200)]
run-command: add first helper for pp child states
There is a recurring pattern of testing parallel process child states
and file descriptors to determine if a child is running, receiving any
input or if it's ready for cleanup.
Name the pp_child structure and introduce a first helper to make these
checks more readable. Next commits will add more helpers and checks.
Suggested-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com> Signed-off-by: Adrian Ratiu <adrian.ratiu@collabora.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Building a list using commit_list_insert_by_date() has quadratic worst
case complexity. Avoid it by using prio_queue.
Use prio_queue_peek()+prio_queue_replace() instead of prio_queue_get()+
prio_queue_put() if possible, as the former only rebalance the
prio_queue heap once instead of twice.
In sane repositories this won't make much of a difference because the
number of items in the list or queue won't be very high:
Benchmark 1: ./git_v2.52.0 show-branch origin/main origin/next origin/seen origin/todo
Time (mean ± σ): 538.2 ms ± 0.8 ms [User: 527.6 ms, System: 9.6 ms]
Range (min … max): 537.0 ms … 539.2 ms 10 runs
Benchmark 2: ./git show-branch origin/main origin/next origin/seen origin/todo
Time (mean ± σ): 530.6 ms ± 0.4 ms [User: 519.8 ms, System: 9.8 ms]
Range (min … max): 530.1 ms … 531.3 ms 10 runs
Summary
./git show-branch origin/main origin/next origin/seen origin/todo ran
1.01 ± 0.00 times faster than ./git_v2.52.0 show-branch origin/main origin/next origin/seen origin/todo
That number is not limited, though, and in pathological cases like the
one in p6010 we see a sizable improvement:
Test v2.52.0 HEAD
------------------------------------------------------------------
6010.4: git show-branch 2.19(2.19+0.00) 0.03(0.02+0.00) -98.6%
macOS: use iconv from Homebrew if needed and present
The library function iconv(3) supplied with macOS versions 15.7.2
(Sequoia) and 26.1 (Tahoe) is unreliable when doing conversions from
ISO-2022-JP to UTF-8 in multiple steps; t3900 reports this breakage:
not ok 17 - ISO-2022-JP should be shown in UTF-8 now
not ok 25 - ISO-2022-JP should be shown in UTF-8 now
not ok 38 - commit --fixup into ISO-2022-JP from UTF-8
As a workaround, use libiconv from Homebrew, if available. Search it in
its default locations: /opt/homebrew for Apple Silicon and /usr/local
for macOS Intel, with the former taking precedence. Respect ICONVDIR if
already set by the user, though.
On macOS we opportunistically use Homebrew-installed versions of
gettext(3) and msgfmt(1). Make that behavior configurable by providing
make variables to disable Homebrew usage (NO_HOMEBREW) and to allow
using a non-default installation location (HOMEBREW_PREFIX).
Include and link only the gettext keg via the symlink opt/gettext
pointing to its installed version instead of using the Homebrew prefix.
This is simpler and prevents accidentally including other libraries.
brian m. carlson [Wed, 24 Dec 2025 20:32:53 +0000 (20:32 +0000)]
checkout: quote invalid treeish in error message
We received a report that invoking "git restore -source my_base_branch"
resulted in the confusing error message "fatal: could not resolve
ource". This looked like a typo in our error message, but it is
actually because "-source" is missing its second dash and is being
resolved as "-s ource". However, due to the lack of the quoting
recommended in CodingGuidelines, this is confusing to the reader and
we can do better.
Add the necessary quoting to this message. With this change, we now get
this less confusing message:
fatal: could not resolve 'ource'
Reported-by: Zhelyo Zhelev <zhelyo@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
"git fetch" that involves fetching tags, when a tag being fetched
needs to overwrite existing one, failed to fetch other tags, which
has been corrected.
* kn/fix-fetch-backfill-tag-with-batched-ref-updates:
fetch: fix failed batched updates skipping operations
fetch: fix non-conflicting tags not being committed
fetch: extract out reference committing logic
Junio C Hamano [Tue, 23 Dec 2025 02:33:15 +0000 (11:33 +0900)]
Merge branch 'jc/submodule-add'
"git submodule add" to add a submodule under <name> segfaulted,
when a submodule.<name>.something is already in .gitmodules file
without defining where its submodule.<name>.path is, which has been
corrected.
Junio C Hamano [Tue, 23 Dec 2025 02:33:15 +0000 (11:33 +0900)]
Merge branch 'ds/doc-scalar-config'
Documentation updates.
* ds/doc-scalar-config:
scalar: document config settings
scalar: alphabetize and simplify config
scalar: remove stale config values
scalar: use index.skipHash=true for performance
scalar: annotate config file with "set by scalar"
Junio C Hamano [Mon, 22 Dec 2025 05:57:48 +0000 (14:57 +0900)]
Merge branch 'ps/odb-alternates-object-sources'
Code refactoring around alternate object store.
* ps/odb-alternates-object-sources:
odb: write alternates via sources
odb: read alternates via sources
odb: drop forward declaration of `read_info_alternates()`
odb: remove mutual recursion when parsing alternates
odb: stop splitting alternate in `odb_add_to_alternates_file()`
odb: move computation of normalized objdir into `alt_odb_usable()`
odb: resolve relative alternative paths when parsing
odb: refactor parsing of alternates to be self-contained
D. Ben Knoble [Thu, 18 Dec 2025 23:25:44 +0000 (18:25 -0500)]
rust: build correctly without GNU sed
From e509b5b8be (rust: support for Windows, 2025-10-15), we check
cargo's information to decide which library to build. However, that
check mistakenly used "sed -s" ("consider files as separate rather than
as a single, continuous long stream"), which is a GNU extension. The
build thus fails on macOS with "meson -Drust=enabled", which comes with
BSD-derived sed.
Instead, use the intended "sed -n" and print the matching section of the
output. This failure mode likely went unnoticed on systems with GNU sed
(common for developer machines and CI) because, in those instances, the
output being matched by case is the full cargo output (which either
contains the string "-windows-" or doesn't).
Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com> Helped-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im> Signed-off-by: D. Ben Knoble <ben.knoble+github@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Junio C Hamano [Fri, 19 Dec 2025 08:57:16 +0000 (17:57 +0900)]
Merge branch 'ps/ci-rust' into dk/ci-rust-fix
* ps/ci-rust:
rust: support for Windows
ci: verify minimum supported Rust version
ci: check for common Rust mistakes via Clippy
rust/varint: add safety comments
ci: check formatting of our Rust code
ci: deduplicate calls to `apt-get update`
t8020: fix test failure due to indeterministic tag sorting
gitlab-ci: upload Meson test logs as JUnit reports
gitlab-ci: drop workaround for Python certificate store on Windows
gitlab-ci: ignore failures to disable realtime monitoring
gitlab-ci: dedup instructions to disable realtime monitoring
ci: enable Rust for breaking-changes jobs
ci: convert "pedantic" job into full build with breaking changes
BreakingChanges: announce Rust becoming mandatory
varint: reimplement as test balloon for Rust
varint: use explicit width for integers
help: report on whether or not Rust is enabled
Makefile: introduce infrastructure to build internal Rust library
Makefile: reorder sources after includes
meson: add infrastructure to build internal Rust library
When 58aaf59133b (t: introduce GIT_TEST_DEFAULT_REF_FORMAT envvar,
2023-12-29) copy-edited the `test_detect_hash` function, the code
comment was accidentally left unchanged. Let's adjust it.
Noticed-by: Matthew John Cheetham <mjcheetham@outlook.com> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Jeff King [Thu, 18 Dec 2025 12:18:19 +0000 (07:18 -0500)]
t5563: add missing end-of-line in HTTP header
In t5563, we test how various oddly-formatted WWW-Authenticate headers
are passed through curl to git's credential subsystem (and ultimately
out to credential helpers). One test, "access using basic auth with
wwwauth header mixed line-endings" does something odd. It does not mix
line endings at all (which must be CRLF according to the RFC anyway),
but omits the line ending entirely for the final header!
This means that the server produces an incomplete response. We send our
final header, and then the newline which is meant to mark the end of
headers (and the start of the body) becomes the line ending for that
header. And there is no header/body separator in the output at all.
The headers themselves are produced from the custom-auth.challenge file
we write in the test (which is missing the final CRLF), and then the
header/body separator comes from our lib-httpd/nph-custom-auth.sh CGI.
(Ignore for a moment that it is producing a bare newline, which I think
is a bug; it should be a CRLF but curl is happy with either).
Older versions of curl seemed to be OK with the truncated output, but
the upcoming 8.18.0 release seems to get confused. Specifically, since 67ae101666 (http: unfold response headers earlier, 2025-12-12) our
request to the server fails with insufficient credentials. I traced far
enough to see that curl does relay the header back to us, which we then
pass to a credential helper, which gives us the correct
username/password combination. But on our followup request, curl refuses
to send the Authorization header (and so gets an HTTP 401 again).
The change in curl's behavior is a bit unexpected, but since we are
sending it garbage, it is hard to complain too much. Let's add the
missing CRLF to the header. I _think_ this was just an oversight and not
the intent of the test. And that the "mixed line-endings" really meant
"mixed continuations", since we differ from the previous test in
continuing with both space and tab. So I've likewise updated the test
title to match that assumption.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Jeff King [Thu, 18 Dec 2025 12:13:47 +0000 (07:13 -0500)]
t5551: handle trailing slashes in expected cookies output
We check in t5551 that curl updates the expected list of cookies after
making a request. We do this by telling it to read and write cookies
from a particular text file, and then checking that after curl runs, the
file has the expected content.
However, in the upcoming curl 8.18.0, the output file has changed
slightly: curl will canonicalize the paths it writes, due to commit a093c93994 (cookie: only keep and use the canonical cleaned up path,
2025-12-07). In particular, it strips trailing slashes from the paths we
see in the cookies.txt file.
This doesn't matter to Git, as the cookie handling is all internal to
curl. But our test is overly brittle and breaks as a result.
We can fix it by matching either format. We'll expect the new format
(without trailing slashes) and strip the slashes from curl's output
before comparing. That lets us pass with both old and new versions (I
tested against curl's 8_17_0 and rc-8_18_0-2 tags, which are
respectively before and after the curl change).
In theory it might be nice to try to future-proof this test more by
looking only for the bits we care about, rather than a byte-wise
comparison of the whole file. But after removing comments and blank
lines (which we already do), we care about most of what's there. So it's
not clear to me what a more liberal test would look like. Given that the
format doesn't change all that often, it's probably OK to stop here and
see if it ever breaks again.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Junio C Hamano [Thu, 18 Dec 2025 03:35:40 +0000 (12:35 +0900)]
odb: do not use "blank" substitute for NULL
When various *object_info() functions are given an extended object
info structure as NULL by a caller that does not want any details,
the code uses a file-scope static blank_oi and passes it down to
the helper functions they use, to avoid handling NULL specifically.
The ps/object-read-stream topic graduated to 'master' recently
however had a bug that assumed that two identically named file-scope
static variables in two functions are the same, which of course is
not the case. This made "git commit" take 0.38 seconds to 1508
seconds in some case, as reported by Aaron Plattner here:
We _could_ move the blank_oi variable to the global scope in common
section to fix this regression, but explicitly handling the NULL is
a much safer fix. It would also reduce the chance of errors that
somebody accidentally writes into blank_oi, making its contents
dirty, which potentially will make subsequent calls into the
function misbehave. By explicitly handling NULL input, we no longer
have to worry about it.
Reported-by: Aaron Plattner <aplattner@nvidia.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Junio C Hamano [Thu, 18 Dec 2025 03:21:21 +0000 (12:21 +0900)]
Merge branch 'ps/object-read-stream' into jc/object-read-stream-fix
* ps/object-read-stream: (32 commits)
streaming: drop redundant type and size pointers
streaming: move into object database subsystem
streaming: refactor interface to be object-database-centric
streaming: move logic to read packed objects streams into backend
streaming: move logic to read loose objects streams into backend
streaming: make the `odb_read_stream` definition public
streaming: get rid of `the_repository`
streaming: rely on object sources to create object stream
packfile: introduce function to read object info from a store
streaming: move zlib stream into backends
streaming: create structure for filtered object streams
streaming: create structure for packed object streams
streaming: create structure for loose object streams
streaming: create structure for in-core object streams
streaming: allocate stream inside the backend-specific logic
streaming: explicitly pass packfile info when streaming a packed object
streaming: propagate final object type via the stream
streaming: drop the `open()` callback function
streaming: rename `git_istream` into `odb_read_stream`
object-file: refactor writing objects via a stream
...
Matthew Hughes [Wed, 17 Dec 2025 19:59:55 +0000 (19:59 +0000)]
docs: note the type of core.attributesfile
The previous wording:
> Path expansions are made the same way as for `core.excludesFile`.
required one to check the docs for 'core.excludesFile' and from there
the definition of the pathname variable type to understand the path
expansion behaviour of this variable. Instead, just link directly to the
pathname type.
This change is basically the same rewording as was done to
'core.excludesFile' in dca83abd (config: describe 'pathname' value
type, 2016-04-29).
Signed-off-by: Matthew Hughes <matthewhughes934@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Justin Tobler [Wed, 17 Dec 2025 17:54:03 +0000 (11:54 -0600)]
builtin/repo: add disk size info to keyvalue stucture output
Similar to a prior commit, extend the keyvalue and nul output formats of
the git-repo(1) structure command to additionally provide info regarding
total object disk sizes by object type.
Signed-off-by: Justin Tobler <jltobler@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Justin Tobler [Wed, 17 Dec 2025 17:54:02 +0000 (11:54 -0600)]
builtin/repo: add inflated object info to structure table
Update the table output format for the git-repo(1) structure command to
begin printing the total inflated object size info by object type. To be
more human-friendly, larger values are scaled down and displayed with
the appropriate unit prefix. Output for the keyvalue and nul formats
remains unchanged.
Signed-off-by: Justin Tobler <jltobler@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Justin Tobler [Wed, 17 Dec 2025 17:54:01 +0000 (11:54 -0600)]
builtin/repo: add inflated object info to keyvalue structure output
The structure subcommand for git-repo(1) outputs basic count information
for objects and references. Extend this output to also provide
information regarding total size of inflated objects by object type.
For now, object size by object type info is only added to the keyvalue
and nul output formats. In a subsequent commit, this info is also added
to the table format.
Signed-off-by: Justin Tobler <jltobler@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Justin Tobler [Wed, 17 Dec 2025 17:54:00 +0000 (11:54 -0600)]
builtin/repo: humanise count values in structure output
The table output format for the git-repo(1) structure subcommand is used
by default and intended to provide output to users in a human-friendly
manner. When the reference/object count values in a repository are
large, it becomes more cumbersome for users to read the values.
For larger values, update the table output format to instead produce
more human-friendly count values that are scaled down with the
appropriate unit prefix. Output for the keyvalue and nul formats remains
unchanged.
Signed-off-by: Justin Tobler <jltobler@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Justin Tobler [Wed, 17 Dec 2025 17:53:59 +0000 (11:53 -0600)]
strbuf: split out logic to humanise byte values
In a subsequent commit, byte size values displayed in table output for
the git-repo(1) "structure" subcommand will be shown in a more
human-readable format with the appropriate unit prefixes. For this
usecase, the downscaled values and unit strings must be handled
separately to ensure proper column alignment.
Split out logic from strbuf_humanise() to downscale byte values and
determine the corresponding unit prefix into a separate humanise_bytes()
function that provides seperate value and unit strings.
Note that the "byte" string in "t/helper/test-simple-ipc.c" is unmarked
for translation here so that it doesn't conflict with the newly defined
plural "byte/bytes" translation and instead uses it.
Signed-off-by: Justin Tobler <jltobler@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Justin Tobler [Wed, 17 Dec 2025 17:53:58 +0000 (11:53 -0600)]
builtin/repo: group per-type object values into struct
The `object_stats` structure stores object counts by type. In a
subsequent commit, additional per-type object measurements will also be
stored. Group per-type object values into a new struct to allow better
reuse.
Signed-off-by: Justin Tobler <jltobler@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
t7800: work around the MSYS path conversion on Windows
Git's test suite's relies on Unix shell scripting, which is
understandable, of course, given Git's firm roots (and indeed, ongoing
focus) on Linux.
This fact, combined with Unix shell scripting's natural
habitat -- which is, naturally... *drumroll*... Unix --
often has unintended side effects, where developers expect the test
suite to run in a Unix environment, which is an incorrect assumption.
One instance of this problem can be observed in the 'difftool --dir-diff
handles modified symlinks' test case in `t7800-difftool.sh`, which
assumes that all absolute paths start with a forward slash. That
assumption is incorrect in general, e.g. on Windows, where absolute
paths have many shapes and forms, none of which starts with a forward
slash.
The only saving grace is that this test case is currently not run on
Windows because of the `SYMLINK` prerequisite. However, I am currently
working towards upstreaming symbolic link support from Git for Windows
to upstream Git, which will put a crack into that saving grace.
Let's change that test case so that it does not rely on absolute paths
(which are passed to the "external command" `ls` as parameters and are
therefore part of its output, and which the test case wants to filter
out before verifying that the output is as expected) starting with a
forward slash. Let's instead rely on the much more reliable fact that
`ls` will output the path in a line that ends in a colon, and simply
filter out those lines by matching said colon instead.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
t6423: introduce Windows-specific handling for symlinking to /dev/null
The device `/dev/null` does not exist on Windows, it's called `NUL`
there. Calling `ln -s /dev/null my-symlink` in a symlink-enabled MSYS2
Bash will therefore literally link to a file or directory called `null`
that is supposed to be in the current drive's top-level `dev` directory.
Which typically does not exist.
The test, however, really wants the created symbolic link to point to
the NUL device. Let's instead use the `mklink` utility on Windows to
perform that job, and keep using `ln -s /dev/null <target>` on
non-Windows platforms.
While at it, add the missing `SYMLINKS` prereq because this test _still_
would not pass on Windows before support for symbolic links is
upstreamed from Git for Windows.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
t1305: skip symlink tests that do not apply to Windows
In Git for Windows, the gitdir is canonicalized so that even when the
gitdir is specified via a symbolic link, the `gitdir:` conditional
include will only match the real directory path.
Unfortunately, t1305 codifies a different behavior in two test cases,
which are hereby skipped on Windows.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The MSYS2 runtime (which inherits this trait from the Cygwin runtime,
and which is used by Git for Windows' Bash to emulate POSIX
functionality on Windows, the same Bash that is also used to run Git's
test suite on Windows) has a mode where it can create native symbolic
links on Windows.
Naturally, this is a bit of a strange feature, given that Cygwin goes
out of its way to support Unix-like paths even if no Win32 program
understands those, and the symbolic links have to use Win32 paths
instead (which Win32 programs understand very well).
As a consequence, the symbolic link targets get normalized before the
links are created.
This results in certain quirks that Git's test suite is ill equipped to
accommodate (because Git's test suite expects to be able to use
Unix-like paths even on Windows).
The test script t1006-cat-file.sh contains two prime examples, two test
cases that need to skip a couple assertions because they are simply
wrong in the context of Git for Windows.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
t0600: fix incomplete prerequisite for a test case
The 'symref transaction supports symlinks' test case is guarded by the
`SYMLINK` prerequisite because `core.prefersymlinkrefs = true` requires
symbolic links to be supported.
However, the `preferSymlinkRefs` feature is not supported on Windows,
therefore this test case needs the `MINGW` prerequisite, too.
There's a couple more cases where we set this config key:
- In a subsequent test in t0600, but there we explicitly set it to
"false". So this would naturally be supported by Windows.
- In t7201 we set the value to `yes`, but we never verify that the
written reference is a symbolic link in the first place. I guess
that we could rather remove setting the configuration value here, as
we are about to deprecate support for symrefs via symbolic links in
the first place. But that's certainly outside of the scope of this
patch.
- In t9903 we do the same, but likewise, we don't check whether the
written file is a symbolic link.
Therefore this seems to be the only instance where the tests actually
need to be adapted.
Helped-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Just like 0fdcfa2f9f5 (t0301: fixes for windows compatibility,
2021-09-14) explained, we should not call `mkdir -m<mode>` in the test
suite because that would fail on Windows.
There was one forgotten instance of this which was hidden by a `SYMLINK`
prerequisite. Currently, this prevents this test case from being
executed on Windows, but with the upcoming support for symbolic links,
it would become a problem.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The test case 're-init to move gitdir symlink' wants to compare the
contents of `newdir/.git`, which is a symbolic link pointing to a file.
However, `git diff --no-index`, which is used by `test_cmp` on Windows,
does not resolve symlinks; It shows the symlink _target_ instead (with a
file mode of 120000). That is totally unexpected by the test case, which
as a consequence fails, meaning that it's a bug in the test case itself.
Co-authored-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The `_wopen()` function would gladly follow a symbolic link to a
non-existent file and create it when given above-mentioned flags.
Git expects the `open()` call to fail, though. So let's add yet another
work-around to pretend that Windows behaves according to POSIX, see:
https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/007904875/functions/open.html#:~:text=If%20O_CREAT%20and%20O_EXCL%20are,set%2C%20the%20result%20is%20undefined.
This is required to let t4115.8(--reject removes .rej symlink if it
exists) pass on Windows when enabling the MSYS2 runtime's symbolic link
support.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
apply: symbolic links lack a "trustable executable bit"
When 0482c32c334b (apply: ignore working tree filemode when
!core.filemode, 2023-12-26) fixed `git apply` to stop warning about
executable files, it inadvertently changed the code flow also for
symbolic links and directories.
Let's narrow the scope of the special `!trust_executable_git` code path
to apply only to regular files.
This is needed to let t4115.5(symlink escape when creating new files)
pass on Windows when symbolic link support is enabled in the MSYS2
runtime.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Ever since fe53bbc9beb (Git.pm: Always set Repository to absolute path
if autodetecting, 2009-05-07), the t9700 test _must_ fail on Windows
because of that age-old Unix paths vs Windows paths problem.
The underlying root cause is that Git cannot run with a regular Win32
variant of Perl, the assumption that every path is a Unix path is just
too strong in Git's Perl code.
As a consequence, Git for Windows is basically stuck with using the
MSYS2 variant of Perl which uses a POSIX emulation layer (which is a
friendly fork of Cygwin) _and_ a best-effort Unix <-> Windows paths
conversion whenever crossing the boundary between MSYS2 and regular
Win32 processes. It is best effort only, though, using heuristics to
automagically convert correctly in most cases, but not in all cases.
In the context of this here patch, this means that asking `git.exe` for
the absolute path of the `.git/` directory will return a Win32 path
because `git.exe` is a regular Win32 executable that has no idea about
Unix-ish paths. But above-mentioned commit introduced a test that wants
to verify that this path is identical to the one that the Git Perl
module reports (which refuses to use Win32 paths and uses Unix-ish paths
instead). Obviously, this must fail because no heuristics can kick in at
that layer.
This test failure has not even been caught when Git introduced Windows
support in its CI definition in 2e90484eb4a (ci: add a Windows job to
the Azure Pipelines definition, 2019-01-29), as all tests relying on
Perl had to be disabled even from the start (because the CI runs would
otherwise have resulted in prohibitively long runtimes, not because
Windows is super slow per se, but because Git's test suite keeps
insisting on using technology that requires a POSIX emulation layer,
which _is_ super slow on Windows).
To work around this failure, let's use the `cygpath` utility to convert
the absolute `gitdir` path into the form that the Perl code expects.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>