ci: run expensive tests on push builds to integration branches
Derrick Stolee suggested [1] that expensive tests should be run at a
regular cadence rather than on every PR iteration. Gate GIT_TEST_LONG
on push builds to the integration branches (next, master, main, maint)
so that the EXPENSIVE prereq is satisfied there but not during PR
validation, where the extra minutes of wall-clock time do not justify
themselves.
Helped-by: Derrick Stolee <derrickstolee@github.com> Assisted-by: Claude Opus 4.6 Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Even with precomputed pack constants that reduced the helper's
runtime from minutes to seconds, the >4GB clone tests still take
200-850 seconds across CI jobs. The bottleneck is no longer the
pack generation but the clone operations themselves: transporting,
unpacking, and indexing 4 GiB of data through unpack-objects and
index-pack is inherently expensive.
As Jeff King pointed out [1], t5608 alone takes 160 seconds on his
laptop while the rest of the entire test suite finishes in under 90
seconds, and the test's disk footprint (4+ GiB source repo, then
two clones) is problematic for developers who use RAM disks for
their trash directories.
Gate the >4GB tests on the EXPENSIVE prereq (which requires
GIT_TEST_LONG to be set) in addition to SIZE_T_IS_64BIT, keeping
them out of normal local test runs.
Add a SHA-256 entry to the fast_packs[] table. The pack prefix and
deflate block structure are identical to SHA-1 (the pack format does
not encode the hash algorithm in its header). Only the suffix differs:
SHA-256 OIDs are 32 bytes instead of 20, giving a 609-byte suffix
compared to 513 for SHA-1, and a different pack checksum.
The constants were generated by running the generic path inside a
repository initialized with --object-format=sha256.
Assisted-by: Claude Opus 4.6 Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
test-tool synthesize: precompute pack for 4 GiB + 1
The synthesize helper hashes roughly 8 GiB of data through SHA-1 to
produce a 4 GiB + 1 pack (4 GiB for the pack checksum, 4 GiB for
the blob OID). Since the blob content is all NUL bytes, every byte
in the resulting pack file is deterministic for a given blob size and
hash algorithm.
Add a fast path that writes the pack from precomputed constants:
a 25-byte prefix (pack header, object header, zlib header, first
block header), the zero-filled bulk with periodic 5-byte deflate
block headers, and a 513-byte suffix (tree, two commits, empty tree,
pack SHA-1 checksum). This eliminates all SHA-1 and adler32
computation, making the helper purely I/O-bound.
The precomputed constants are stored in a struct fast_pack array
keyed by hash algorithm format_id, so that adding SHA-256 support
later requires only adding another array entry with its suffix.
The constants were generated by running the generic path and
extracting the non-zero bytes from the resulting pack file.
Benchmarks generating a 4 GiB + 1 pack (3 runs each, SHA1DC on
x86_64):
On CI, where t5608 currently takes 200-850 seconds depending on the
job, the fast path cuts the pack-generation phase from minutes to
seconds, leaving only the clone operations themselves.
Assisted-by: Claude Opus 4.6 Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
test-tool synthesize: use the unsafe hash for speed
Jeff King pointed out on the mailing list [1] that t5608's new >4GB
test cases dominate the entire test suite runtime: 160 seconds on his
laptop when the rest of the suite finishes in under 90 seconds, and
305-850 seconds across CI jobs. The bottleneck is that the synthesize
helper hashes roughly 8 GB of data through SHA-1 (4 GB for the pack
checksum plus 4 GB for the blob OID) for a 4 GB+1 blob.
Since the helper generates known test data, collision detection is
unnecessary. Switch from repo->hash_algo to unsafe_hash_algo(), which
uses hardware-accelerated SHA-1 (via OpenSSL or Apple CommonCrypto)
when available.
Benchmarks on an x86_64 machine generating a 4 GB+1 pack (2 runs
each, interleaved):
SHA-1 backend Run 1 Run 2
SHA1DC (safe) 75s 80s
OpenSSL (unsafe) 21s 19s
The effect scales linearly. At 64 MB with 10 randomized interleaved
runs, the OpenSSL unsafe backend shows a 5.4x improvement (median
0.202s vs 1.088s) with tight variance (stdev 0.028s vs 0.095s).
The speedup is only realized when the build has a fast unsafe backend
compiled in. The CI's linux-TEST-vars job already sets
OPENSSL_SHA1_UNSAFE=YesPlease; macOS benefits from Apple CommonCrypto
when configured. On builds without a separate unsafe backend (such as
the default Windows builds), unsafe_hash_algo() returns the regular
collision-detecting implementation and the change is a no-op.
The shift overflow bug in index-pack and unpack-objects caused incorrect
object size calculation when the encoded size required more than 32 bits
of shift. This would result in corrupted or failed unpacking of objects
larger than 4GB.
Add a test that creates a pack file containing a 4GB+ blob using the
new 'test-tool synthesize pack --reachable-large' command, then clones
the repository to verify the fix works correctly.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
test-tool: add a helper to synthesize large packfiles
To test Git's behavior with very large pack files, we need a way to
generate such files quickly.
A naive approach using only readily-available Git commands would take
over 10 hours for a 4GB pack file, which is prohibitive.
Side-stepping Git's machinery and actual zlib compression by writing
uncompressed content with the appropriate zlib header makes things
much faster. The fastest method using this approach generates many
small, unreachable blob objects and takes about 1.5 minutes for 4GB.
However, this cannot be used because we need to test git clone, which
requires a reachable commit history.
Generating many reachable commits with small, uncompressed blobs takes
about 4 minutes for 4GB. But this approach 1) does not reproduce the
issues we want to fix (which require individual objects larger than
4GB) and 2) is comparatively slow because of the many SHA-1
calculations.
The approach taken here generates a single large blob (filled with NUL
bytes), along with the trees and commits needed to make it reachable.
This takes about 2.5 minutes for 4.5GB, which is the fastest option
that produces a valid, clonable repository with an object large enough
to trigger the bugs we want to test.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
delta, packfile: use size_t for delta header sizes
The delta header decoding functions return unsigned long, which
truncates on Windows for objects larger than 4GB. Introduce size_t
variants get_delta_hdr_size_sz() and get_size_from_delta_sz() that
preserve the full 64-bit size, and use them in packed_object_info()
where the size is needed for streaming decisions.
This was originally authored by LordKiRon <https://github.com/LordKiRon>,
who preferred not to reveal their real name and therefore agreed that I
take over authorship.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
odb, packfile: use size_t for streaming object sizes
The odb_read_stream structure uses unsigned long for the size field,
which is 32-bit on Windows even in 64-bit builds. When streaming
objects larger than 4GB, the size would be truncated to zero or an
incorrect value, resulting in empty files being written to disk.
Change the size field in odb_read_stream to size_t and introduce
unpack_object_header_sz() to return sizes via size_t pointer. Since
object_info.sizep remains unsigned long for API compatibility, use
temporary variables where the types differ, with comments noting the
truncation limitation for code paths that still use unsigned long.
Widening the producers to size_t in this way introduces a handful of
silent size_t -> unsigned long narrowings on Windows, all in
builtin/pack-objects.c, where the consumers are still typed
unsigned long. Make those narrowings explicit with
cast_size_t_to_ulong() so they assert loudly the moment an object
actually exceeds ULONG_MAX bytes:
- oe_get_size_slow() returns unsigned long but holds a size_t
locally; cast at the return.
- write_reuse_object() passes a size_t into check_pack_inflate(),
whose expect parameter is unsigned long; cast at the call.
- check_object() routes a size_t through SET_SIZE() and
SET_DELTA_SIZE(), both of which take unsigned long via
oe_set_size() / oe_set_delta_size(); cast at the three call
sites in the OBJ_OFS_DELTA / OBJ_REF_DELTA branches and in the
non-delta default arm.
The cast-only treatment is deliberately a stop-gap. Properly
widening oe_set_size, oe_get_size_slow's return type,
check_pack_inflate's expect parameter, object_info.sizep,
patch_delta, and the OE_SIZE_BITS bit-fields cascades into a series
that is too large to be reviewable, so the proper widening is
deferred to a follow-up topic. Until then,
cast_size_t_to_ulong() at least makes the truncation explicit at
the source: it documents the boundary, and on a 64-bit non-Windows
platform it is a no-op.
This was originally authored by LordKiRon <https://github.com/LordKiRon>,
who preferred not to reveal their real name and therefore agreed that I
take over authorship.
Helped-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
On Windows, zlib's `uLong` type is 32-bit even on 64-bit systems. When
processing data streams larger than 4GB, the `total_in` and `total_out`
fields in zlib's `z_stream` structure wrap around, which caused the
sanity checks in `zlib_post_call()` to trigger `BUG()` assertions.
The git_zstream wrapper now tracks its own 64-bit totals rather than
copying them from zlib. The sanity checks compare only the low bits,
using `maximum_unsigned_value_of_type(uLong)` to mask appropriately for
the platform's `uLong` size.
This is based on work by LordKiRon in git-for-windows#6076.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
index-pack, unpack-objects: use size_t for object size
When unpacking objects from a packfile, the object size is decoded
from a variable-length encoding. On platforms where unsigned long is
32-bit (such as Windows, even in 64-bit builds), the shift operation
overflows when decoding sizes larger than 4GB. The result is a
truncated size value, causing the unpacked object to be corrupted or
rejected.
Fix this by changing the size variable to size_t, which is 64-bit on
64-bit platforms, and ensuring the shift arithmetic occurs in 64-bit
space.
Declare the per-byte continuation variable `c` as size_t as well,
matching the canonical varint decoder unpack_object_header_buffer()
in packfile.c. With c as size_t the expression (c & 0x7f) << shift
is naturally size_t-typed, so the explicit cast that an earlier
iteration carried at the use site is no longer needed.
While at it, add the same overflow guard that
unpack_object_header_buffer() carries: if the cumulative shift would
exceed bitsizeof(size_t) - 7, refuse the input rather than invoking
undefined behavior. Unlike unpack_object_header_buffer(), which
labels this case "bad object header", report it as the platform
limit it actually is: a header may be perfectly well-formed and
still encode a size we cannot represent locally (notably on a
32-bit build consuming a packfile produced on a 64-bit host).
This was originally authored by LordKiRon <https://github.com/LordKiRon>,
who preferred not to reveal their real name and therefore agreed that I
take over authorship.
Helped-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
6cc6d1b4c699 (Documentation: update add --force option + ignore=all
config, 2026-02-06) added text describing both the ignore=none and
ignore=all behaviors. The former had minor formatting and grammatical
errors, while the latter was a bit garbled. I have tried to tweak the
wording on the latter to make it read as I think was intended, and fixed
the minor grammatical issues with both as well.
Signed-off-by: Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
doc: fix self-referential config in sendemail.smtpSSLClientKey
a8215a205141 (send-email: add client certificate options, 2026-03-02)
added documentation for sendemail.smtpSSLClientKey that says it works
"in conjunction with `sendemail.smtpSSLClientKey`" -- referring to
itself. It appears that `sendemail.smtpSSLClientCert` was the intended
reference; fix it.
Signed-off-by: Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Jeff King [Thu, 16 Apr 2026 20:06:59 +0000 (16:06 -0400)]
MIDX: revert the default version to v1
We introduced midx version 2 in b2ec8e90c2 (midx: do not require packs
to be sorted in lexicographic order, 2026-02-24) and now write it by
default. The rationale was that older versions should ignore the v2 midx
and fall back to using the packs (just like we do for other midx
errors). Unfortunately this is not the case, as we have a hard die()
when we see an unknown midx version.
As a result, writing a midx with Git 2.54-rc2 puts the repository into a
state that is unusable with Git 2.53. And this midx write may happen
behind the scenes as part of normal operations, like fetch.
Let's switch back to writing v1 by default to avoid regressing the case
where multiple versions of Git are used on the same repository.
There is one gotcha, though: the v2 format is required for some new
features, like midx compaction, and running "git multi-pack-index
compact" will complain when asked to write a v1 index. The user must set
midx.version to "2" to make the feature work.
So instead of always using v1, we'll base the default on whether the
requested feature requires v2. That does mean that running midx
compaction will create a repository that can't be read by older versions
of Git. But we never do that by default; only people experimenting with
the new feature will be affected.
We have to adjust the test expectation in t5319, since it will now
generate v1 files. And our "auto-select v2" is covered by the tests in
t5335, which continue to check that compaction works without having to
set midx.version manually (and also explicitly check that asking for v1
with compaction reports the problem).
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
- correct translation of pathspec msgs
Corrects cases where the “pathspec” is translated as if it was a
path
- correct translation of refspec msgs
Corrects cases where the “refspec” were not consistently translated
- correct translation of credential msgs
Corrects cases where the “credential” were not correctly translated
Signed-off-by: Stefan Björnelund <stefan.bjornelund.gnome@gmail.com> Modified-by: Peter Krefting <peter@softwolves.pp.se>
Originally-authored-by: dependabot[bot] <support@github.com> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Jeff King [Sat, 11 Apr 2026 21:55:18 +0000 (17:55 -0400)]
gitglossary: fix indentation of sub-lists
The glossary entry is a list of terms and their definitions, so
multi-paragraph definitions need "+" continuation lines to indicate
that they are part of a single entry.
When an entry contains a sub-list (say, a bulleted list), the final "+"
may become ambiguous: is it connecting the next paragraph to the final
entry of the sub-list, or to the original list of definition paragraphs?
Asciidoc generally connects it to the former, even when we mean the
latter, and you end up with the next paragraph indented incorrectly,
like this:
glob
...defines glob...
Two consecutive asterisks ("**") in patterns matched
against full pathname may have special meaning:
- ...some special meaning of **...
- ...another special meaning of **...
- Other consecutive asterisks are considered invalid.
Glob magic is incompatible with literal magic.
That final "Glob magic is incompatible" paragraph is in the wrong spot.
It should be at the same level as "Two consecutive asterisks", as it is
not part of the final "Other consecutive asterisks" bullet point.
The same problem appears in several other spots in the glossary.
Usually we'd fix this by using "--" markers, which put the sub-list into
its own block. But there's a catch: in some of these spots we are
already in an open block, and nesting open blocks is a problem. It seems
to work for me using Asciidoc 10.2.1, but Asciidoctor 2.0.26 makes a
mess of it (our intent to open a new block seems to close the old one).
Fortunately there's a work-around: when using a "+" list-continuation,
the number of empty lines above the continuation indicates which level
of parent list to continue. So by adding an empty line after our
unordered list (before the "+"), we should be able to continue the
definition list item.
But asciidoc being asciidoc, of course that is not the end of the story.
That technique works fine for the "glob" and "attr" lists in this patch,
but under the "refs" item it works for only 1 of the 2 lists! I can't
figure out why, and this may be an asciidoctor bug. But we can work
around it by using "--" open-block markers here, since we're not
already in an open block.
So using the extra blank line for the first two instances, and "--"
markers for the second two, this patch produces identical output from
"doc-diff HEAD^ HEAD" for both --asciidoctor and --asciidoc modes.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Junio C Hamano [Mon, 13 Apr 2026 18:24:44 +0000 (11:24 -0700)]
CI: bump actions/checkout from 4 to 5 for rust-analysis job
GitHub Actions started complaining about use of Node.js 20 and I was
wondering why only one job uses actions/checkout@v4, while everybody
else already uses actions/checkout@v5.
It turns out that it is caused by a semantic mismerge between e75cd059 (ci: check formatting of our Rust code, 2025-10-15) that
added a new use of actions/checkout@v4 that happened very close to
another change 63541ed9 (build(deps): bump actions/checkout from 4
to 5, 2025-10-16) that updated all uses of actions/checkout@v4 to
use vactions/checkout@v5.
Update the leftover and the last use of actions/checkout@v4 to use
actions/checkout@v5 to help ourselves to move away from Node.js 20.
I claimed in 3c18135b (doc: am: say that --message-id adds a trailer,
2026-02-09) that `git am --message-id` adds a Git trailer. But that
isn’t the case; for the case of a commit message with a subject, body,
and no trailer block:
It does work for two other cases though, namely subject-only and with an
existing trailer block.
This is at best an inconsistency and arguably a bug, but we’re at the
trailing end of the release cycle now. So reverting the doc is safer
than making msg-id act as a trailer, for now.
Revert this hunk from commit 3c18135b except the only useful
change (“Also use inline-verbatim for `Message-ID`”).
Signed-off-by: Kristoffer Haugsbakk <code@khaugsbakk.name> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Junio C Hamano [Fri, 10 Apr 2026 23:47:35 +0000 (16:47 -0700)]
Merge branch 'jc/no-writev-does-not-work'
We used writev() in limited code paths and supplied emulation for
platforms without working writev(), but the emulation was too
faithful to the spec to make the result useless to send even 64kB;
revert the topic and plan to restart the effort later.
* jc/no-writev-does-not-work:
Revert "compat/posix: introduce writev(3p) wrapper"
Revert "wrapper: introduce writev(3p) wrappers"
Revert "sideband: use writev(3p) to send pktlines"
Revert "cmake: use writev(3p) wrapper as needed"
Junio C Hamano [Fri, 10 Apr 2026 14:52:50 +0000 (07:52 -0700)]
rust: we are way beyond 2.53
Earlier we timelined that we'd tune our build procedures to build
with Rust by default in Git 2.53, but we are already in prerelease
freeze for 2.54 now. Update the BreakingChanges document to delay
it until Git 2.55 (slated for the end of June 2026).
Noticed-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net> Helped-by: Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Junio C Hamano [Thu, 9 Apr 2026 22:07:12 +0000 (15:07 -0700)]
writev: retract the topic until we have a better emulation
The emulation layer we added for writev(3p) tries to be too faithful
to the spec that on systems with SSIZE_MAX set to lower than 64kB to
fit a single sideband packet would fail just like the real system
writev(), which makes our use of writev() for sideband messages
unworkable.
Let's revert them and reboot the effort after the release. The
reverted commits are:
$ git log -Swritev --oneline 8023abc632^..v2.52.0-rc1 89152af176 cmake: use writev(3p) wrapper as needed 26986f4cba sideband: use writev(3p) to send pktlines 1970fcef93 wrapper: introduce writev(3p) wrappers 3b9b2c2a29 compat/posix: introduce writev(3p) wrapper
8023abc632 is the merge of ps/upload-pack-buffer-more-writes topic to
the mainline.
Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Junio C Hamano [Thu, 9 Apr 2026 18:21:59 +0000 (11:21 -0700)]
Merge branch 'ds/rev-list-maximal-only-optim'
"git rev-list --maximal-only" has been optimized by borrowing the
logic used by "git show-branch --independent", which computes the
same kind of information much more efficiently.
* ds/rev-list-maximal-only-optim:
rev-list: use reduce_heads() for --maximal-only
p6011: add perf test for rev-list --maximal-only
t6600: test --maximal-only and --independent
Junio C Hamano [Thu, 9 Apr 2026 18:21:59 +0000 (11:21 -0700)]
Merge branch 'jk/c23-const-preserving-fixes-more'
Further work to adjust the codebase for C23 that changes functions
like strchr() that discarded constness when they return a pointer into
a const string to preserve constness.
* jk/c23-const-preserving-fixes-more:
git-compat-util: fix CONST_OUTPARAM typo and indentation
refs/files-backend: drop const to fix strchr() warning
http: drop const to fix strstr() warning
range-diff: drop const to fix strstr() warnings
pkt-line: make packet_reader.line non-const
skip_prefix(): check const match between in and out params
pseudo-merge: fix disk reads from find_pseudo_merge()
find_last_dir_sep(): convert inline function to macro
run-command: explicitly cast away constness when assigning to void
pager: explicitly cast away strchr() constness
transport-helper: drop const to fix strchr() warnings
http: add const to fix strchr() warnings
convert: add const to fix strchr() warnings
Jeff King [Wed, 8 Apr 2026 17:20:55 +0000 (13:20 -0400)]
run_processes_parallel(): fix order of sigpipe handling
In commit ec0becacc9 (run-command: add stdin callback for
parallelization, 2026-01-28), we taught run_processes_parallel() to
ignore SIGPIPE, since we wouldn't want a write() to a broken pipe of one
of the children to take down the whole process.
But there's a subtle ordering issue. After we ignore SIGPIPE, we call
pp_init(), which installs its own cleanup handler for multiple signals
using sigchain_push_common(), which includes SIGPIPE. So if we receive
SIGPIPE while writing to a child, we'll trigger that handler first, pop
it off the stack, and then re-raise (which is then ignored because of
the SIG_IGN we pushed first).
But what does that handler do? It tries to clean up all of the child
processes, under the assumption that when we re-raise the signal we'll
be exiting the process!
So a hook that exits without reading all of its input will cause us to
get SIGPIPE, which will put us in a signal handler that then tries to
kill() that same child.
This seems to be mostly harmless on Linux. The process has already
exited by this point, and though kill() does not complain (since the
process has not been reaped with a wait() call), it does not affect the
exit status of the process.
However, this seems not to be true on all platforms. This case is
triggered by t5401.13, "pre-receive hook that forgets to read its
input". This test fails on NonStop since that hook was converted to the
run_processes_parallel() API.
We can fix it by reordering the code a bit. We should run pp_init()
first, and then push our SIG_IGN onto the stack afterwards, so that it
is truly ignored while feeding the sub-processes.
Note that we also reorder the popping at the end of the function, too.
This is not technically necessary, as we are doing two pops either way,
but now the pops will correctly match their pushes.
This also fixes a related case that we can't test yet. If we did have
more than one process to run, then one child causing SIGPIPE would cause
us to kill() all of the children (which might still actually be
running). But the hook API is the only user of the new feed_pipe
feature, and it does not yet support parallel hook execution. So for now
we'll always execute the processes sequentially. Once parallel hook
execution exists, we'll be able to add a test which covers this.
Reported-by: Randall S. Becker <rsbecker@nexbridge.com> Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Junio C Hamano [Wed, 8 Apr 2026 17:19:18 +0000 (10:19 -0700)]
Merge branch 'tc/replay-ref'
The experimental `git replay` command learned the `--ref=<ref>` option
to allow specifying which ref to update, overriding the default behavior.
* tc/replay-ref:
replay: allow to specify a ref with option --ref
replay: use stuck form in documentation and help message
builtin/replay: mark options as not negatable
Junio C Hamano [Wed, 8 Apr 2026 17:19:17 +0000 (10:19 -0700)]
Merge branch 'ng/add-files-to-cache-wo-rename'
add_files_to_cache() used diff_files() to detect only the paths that
are different between the index and the working tree and add them,
which does not need rename detection, which interfered with unnecessary
conflicts.
* ng/add-files-to-cache-wo-rename:
read-cache: disable renames in add_files_to_cache
Junio C Hamano [Wed, 8 Apr 2026 17:19:17 +0000 (10:19 -0700)]
Merge branch 'ps/reftable-portability'
Update reftable library part with what is used in libgit2 to improve
portability to different target codebases and platforms.
* ps/reftable-portability:
reftable/system: add abstraction to mmap files
reftable/system: add abstraction to retrieve time in milliseconds
reftable/fsck: use REFTABLE_UNUSED instead of UNUSED
reftable/stack: provide fsync(3p) via system header
reftable: introduce "reftable-system.h" header
Junio C Hamano [Wed, 8 Apr 2026 17:19:17 +0000 (10:19 -0700)]
Merge branch 'ps/odb-cleanup'
Various code clean-up around odb subsystem.
* ps/odb-cleanup:
odb: drop unneeded headers and forward decls
odb: rename `odb_has_object()` flags
odb: use enum for `odb_write_object` flags
odb: rename `odb_write_object()` flags
treewide: use enum for `odb_for_each_object()` flags
CodingGuidelines: document our style for flags
Adrian Ratiu [Wed, 8 Apr 2026 16:11:48 +0000 (19:11 +0300)]
t1800: add &&-chains to test helper functions
Add the missing &&'s so we properly propagate failures
between commands in the hook helper functions.
Also add a missing mkdir -p arg (found by adding the &&).
Reported-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder.dev@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Adrian Ratiu <adrian.ratiu@collabora.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Our description of the reftable format is that it is experimental and
subject to change, but that is no longer true. Remove this statement so
as not to mislead users.
In addition, the documentation says that the files format is the
default, but that is not true if breaking changes mode is on. Correct
this information with a conditional.
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
object-file: avoid ODB transaction when not writing objects
In ce1661f9da (odb: add transaction interface, 2025-09-16), existing
ODB transaction logic is adapted to create a transaction interface
at the ODB layer. The intent here is for the ODB transaction
interface to eventually provide an object source agnostic means to
manage transactions.
An unintended consequence of this change though is that
`object-file.c:index_fd()` may enter the ODB transaction path even
when no object write is requested. In non-repository contexts, this
can result in a NULL dereference and segfault. One such case occurs
when running git-diff(1) outside of a repository with
"core.bigFileThreshold" forcing the streaming path in `index_fd()`:
$ echo foo >foo
$ echo bar >bar
$ git -c core.bigFileThreshold=1 diff -- foo bar
In this scenario, the caller only needs to compute the object ID. Object
hashing does not require an ODB, so starting a transaction is both
unnecessary and invalid.
Fix the bug by avoiding the use of ODB transactions in `index_fd()` when
callers are only interested in computing the object hash.
Reported-by: Luca Stefani <luca.stefani.ge1@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Justin Tobler <jltobler@gmail.com>
[jc: adjusted to fd13909e (Merge branch 'jt/odb-transaction', 2025-10-02)] Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The check in "receive-pack" to prevent a checked out branch from
getting updated via updateInstead mechanism has been corrected.
* ps/receive-pack-updateinstead-in-worktree:
receive-pack: use worktree HEAD for updateInstead
t5516: clean up cloned and new-wt in denyCurrentBranch and worktrees test
t5516: test updateInstead with worktree and unborn bare HEAD
The way the "git log -L<range>:<file>" feature is bolted onto the
log/diff machinery is being reworked a bit to make the feature
compatible with more diff options, like -S/G.
* mm/line-log-use-standard-diff-output:
doc: note that -L supports patch formatting and pickaxe options
t4211: add tests for -L with standard diff options
line-log: route -L output through the standard diff pipeline
line-log: fix crash when combined with pickaxe options
Junio C Hamano [Tue, 7 Apr 2026 21:59:26 +0000 (14:59 -0700)]
Merge branch 'ps/fsck-wo-the-repository'
Internals of "git fsck" have been refactored to not depend on the
global `the_repository` variable.
* ps/fsck-wo-the-repository:
builtin/fsck: stop using `the_repository` in error reporting
builtin/fsck: stop using `the_repository` when marking objects
builtin/fsck: stop using `the_repository` when checking packed objects
builtin/fsck: stop using `the_repository` with loose objects
builtin/fsck: stop using `the_repository` when checking reflogs
builtin/fsck: stop using `the_repository` when checking refs
builtin/fsck: stop using `the_repository` when snapshotting refs
builtin/fsck: fix trivial dependence on `the_repository`
fsck: drop USE_THE_REPOSITORY
fsck: store repository in fsck options
fsck: initialize fsck options via a function
fetch-pack: move fsck options into function scope
Junio C Hamano [Tue, 7 Apr 2026 21:59:25 +0000 (14:59 -0700)]
Merge branch 'ps/commit-graph-overflow-fix'
Fix a regression in writing the commit-graph where commits with dates
exceeding 34 bits (beyond year 2514) could cause an underflow and
crash Git during the generation data overflow chunk writing.
Junio C Hamano [Mon, 6 Apr 2026 22:42:51 +0000 (15:42 -0700)]
Merge branch 'jk/c23-const-preserving-fixes'
Adjust the codebase for C23 that changes functions like strchr()
that discarded constness when they return a pointer into a const
string to preserve constness.
* jk/c23-const-preserving-fixes:
config: store allocated string in non-const pointer
rev-parse: avoid writing to const string for parent marks
revision: avoid writing to const string for parent marks
rev-parse: simplify dotdot parsing
revision: make handle_dotdot() interface less confusing
Junio C Hamano [Mon, 6 Apr 2026 22:42:50 +0000 (15:42 -0700)]
Merge branch 'aa/reap-transport-child-processes'
A few code paths that spawned child processes for network
connection weren't wait(2)ing for their children and letting "init"
reap them instead; they have been tightened.
* aa/reap-transport-child-processes:
transport-helper, connect: use clean_on_exit to reap children on abnormal exit
Junio C Hamano [Mon, 6 Apr 2026 22:42:49 +0000 (15:42 -0700)]
Merge branch 'tb/stdin-packs-excluded-but-open'
pack-objects's --stdin-packs=follow mode learns to handle
excluded-but-open packs.
* tb/stdin-packs-excluded-but-open:
repack: mark non-MIDX packs above the split as excluded-open
pack-objects: support excluded-open packs with --stdin-packs
t7704: demonstrate failure with once-cruft objects above the geometric split
pack-objects: refactor `read_packs_list_from_stdin()` to use `strmap`
pack-objects: plug leak in `read_stdin_packs()`