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2024-12-07Makefile: use "generate-perl.sh" to massage Perl libraryPatrick Steinhardt
Extend "generate-perl.sh" such that it knows to also massage the Perl library files. There are two major differences: - We do not read in the Perl header. This is handled by matching on whether or not we have a Perl shebang. - We substitute some more variables, which we read in via our GIT-BUILD-OPTIONS. Adapt both our Makefile and the CMake build instructions to use this. Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2024-12-07Makefile: extract script to massage Perl scriptsPatrick Steinhardt
Extract the script to inject various build-time parameters into our Perl scripts into a standalone script. This is done such that we can reuse it in other build systems. Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2024-12-07Makefile: consistently use PERL_PATHPatrick Steinhardt
When injecting the Perl path into our scripts we sometimes use '@PERL@' while we othertimes use '@PERL_PATH@'. Refactor the code use the latter consistently, which makes it easier to reuse the same logic for multiple scripts. Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2024-12-07Makefile: generate "git.rc" via GIT-VERSION-GENPatrick Steinhardt
The "git.rc" is used on Windows to embed information like the project name and version into the resulting executables. As such we need to inject the version information, which we do by using preprocessor defines. The logic to do so is non-trivial and needs to be kept in sync with the different build systems. Refactor the logic so that we generate "git.rc" via `GIT-VERSION-GEN`. Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2024-12-07Makefile: propagate Git version via generated headerPatrick Steinhardt
We set up a couple of preprocessor macros when compiling Git that propagate the version that Git was built from to `git version` et al. The way this is set up makes it harder than necessary to reuse the infrastructure across the different build systems. Refactor this such that we generate a "version-def.h" header via `GIT-VERSION-GEN` instead. Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2024-12-07Makefile: refactor GIT-VERSION-GEN to be reusablePatrick Steinhardt
Our "GIT-VERSION-GEN" script always writes the "GIT-VERSION-FILE" into the current directory, where the expectation is that it should exist in the source directory. But other build systems that support out-of-tree builds may not want to do that to keep the source directory pristine, even though CMake currently doesn't care. Refactor the script such that it won't write the "GIT-VERSION-FILE" directly anymore, but instead knows to replace @PLACEHOLDERS@ in an arbitrary input file. This allows us to simplify the logic in CMake to determine the project version, but can also be reused later on in order to generate other files that need to contain version information like our "git.rc" file. While at it, change the format of the version file by removing the spaces around the equals sign. Like this we can continue to include the file in our Makefiles, but can also start to source it in shell scripts in subsequent steps. Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2024-12-07Makefile: consistently use @PLACEHOLDER@ to substitutePatrick Steinhardt
We have a bunch of placeholders in our scripts that we replace at build time, for example by using sed(1). These placeholders come in three different formats: @PLACEHOLDER@, @@PLACEHOLDER@@ and ++PLACEHOLDER++. Next to being inconsistent it also creates a bit of a problem with CMake, which only supports the first syntax in its `configure_file()` function. To work around that we instead manually replace placeholders via string operations, which is a hassle and removes safeguards that CMake has to verify that we didn't forget to replace any placeholders. Besides that, other build systems like Meson also support the CMake syntax. Unify our codebase to consistently use the syntax supported by such build systems. Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2024-12-07Makefile: use common template for GIT-BUILD-OPTIONSPatrick Steinhardt
The "GIT-BUILD-OPTIONS" file is generated by our build systems to propagate built-in features and paths to our tests. The generation is done ad-hoc, where both our Makefile and the CMake build instructions simply echo a bunch of strings into the file. This makes it very hard to figure out what variables are expected to exist and what format they have, and the written variables can easily get out of sync between build systems. Introduce a new "GIT-BUILD-OPTIONS.in" template to address this issue. This has multiple advantages: - It demonstrates which built options exist in the first place. - It can serve as a spot to document the build options. - Some build systems complain when not all variables could be substituted, alerting us of mismatches. Others don't, but if we forgot to substitute such variables we now have a bogus string that will likely cause our tests to fail, if they have any meaning in the first place. Backfill values that we didn't yet set in our CMake build instructions. While at it, remove the `SUPPORTS_SIMPLE_IPC` variable that we only set up in CMake as it isn't used anywhere. This change requires us to adapt the setup of TEST_OUTPUT_DIRECTORY in "test-lib.sh" such that it does not get overwritten after sourcing when it has been set up via the environment. This is the only instance I could find where we rely on ordering on variables. Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2024-11-19reftable/system: provide thin wrapper for tempfile subsystemPatrick Steinhardt
We use the tempfile subsystem to write temporary tables, but given that we're in the process of converting the reftable library to become standalone we cannot use this subsystem directly anymore. While we could in theory convert the code to use mkstemp(3p) instead, we'd lose access to our infrastructure that automatically prunes tempfiles via atexit(3p) or signal handlers. Provide a thin wrapper for the tempfile subsystem instead. Like this, the compatibility shim is fully self-contained in "reftable/system.c". Downstream users of the reftable library would have to implement their own tempfile shims by replacing "system.c" with a custom version. Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2024-11-18Makefile: let clar header targets depend on their scriptsPatrick Steinhardt
The targets that generate clar headers depend on their source files, but not on the script that is actually generating the output. Fix the issue by adding the missing dependencies. Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2024-11-18t/unit-tests: convert "clar-generate.awk" into a shell scriptPatrick Steinhardt
Convert "clar-generate.awk" into a shell script that invokes awk(1). This allows us to avoid the shell redirect in the build system, which may otherwise be a problem with build systems on platforms that use a different shell. While at it, wrap the overly long lines in the CMake build instructions. Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2024-11-08Merge branch 'ps/upgrade-clar'Junio C Hamano
Buildfix and upgrade of Clar to a newer version. * ps/upgrade-clar: cmake: set up proper dependencies for generated clar headers cmake: fix compilation of clar-based unit tests Makefile: extract script to generate clar declarations Makefile: adjust sed command for generating "clar-decls.h" t/unit-tests: update clar to 206accb
2024-11-01Merge branch 'ps/platform-compat-fixes'Taylor Blau
Various platform compatibility fixes split out of the larger effort to use Meson as the primary build tool. * ps/platform-compat-fixes: t6006: fix prereq handling with `test_format ()` http: fix build error on FreeBSD builtin/credential-cache: fix missing parameter for stub function t7300: work around platform-specific behaviour with long paths on MinGW t5500, t5601: skip tests which exercise paths with '[::1]' on Cygwin t3404: work around platform-specific behaviour on macOS 10.15 t1401: make invocation of tar(1) work with Win32-provided one t/lib-gpg: fix setup of GNUPGHOME in MinGW t/lib-gitweb: test against the build version of gitweb t/test-lib: wire up NO_ICONV prerequisite t/test-lib: fix quoting of TEST_RESULTS_SAN_FILE
2024-10-25Merge branch 'pb/clar-build-fix'Taylor Blau
Build fix. * pb/clar-build-fix: Makefile: fix dependency for $(UNIT_TEST_DIR)/clar/clar.o
2024-10-21Makefile: extract script to generate clar declarationsPatrick Steinhardt
Extract the script to generate function declarations for the clar unit testing framework into a standalone script. This is done such that we can reuse it in other build systems. Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im> Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
2024-10-21Makefile: adjust sed command for generating "clar-decls.h"Alejandro R. Sedeño
This moves the end-of-line marker out of the captured group, matching the start-of-line marker and for some reason fixing generation of "clar-decls.h" on some older, more esoteric platforms. Signed-off-by: Alejandro R. Sedeño <asedeno@mit.edu> Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im> Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
2024-10-16fuzz: port fuzz-url-decode-mem from OSS-FuzzEric Sesterhenn
Git's fuzz tests are run continuously as part of OSS-Fuzz [1]. Several additional fuzz tests have been contributed directly to OSS-Fuzz; however, these tests are vulnerable to bitrot because they are not built during Git's CI runs, and thus breaking changes are much less likely to be noticed by Git contributors. Port one of these tests back to the Git project: fuzz-url-decode-mem This test was originally written by Eric Sesterhenn as part of a security audit of Git [2]. It was then contributed to the OSS-Fuzz repo in commit c58ac4492 (Git fuzzing: uncomment the existing and add new targets. (#11486), 2024-02-21) by Jaroslav Lobačevski. I (Josh Steadmon) have verified with both Eric and Jaroslav that they're OK with moving this test to the Git project. [1] https://github.com/google/oss-fuzz [2] https://ostif.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/X41-OSTIF-Gitlab-Git-Security-Audit-20230117-public.pdf Co-authored-by: Jaroslav Lobačevski <jarlob@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Josh Steadmon <steadmon@google.com> Signed-off-by: Josh Steadmon <steadmon@google.com> Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
2024-10-16fuzz: port fuzz-parse-attr-line from OSS-FuzzEric Sesterhenn
Git's fuzz tests are run continuously as part of OSS-Fuzz [1]. Several additional fuzz tests have been contributed directly to OSS-Fuzz; however, these tests are vulnerable to bitrot because they are not built during Git's CI runs, and thus breaking changes are much less likely to be noticed by Git contributors. Port one of these tests back to the Git project: fuzz-parse-attr-line This test was originally written by Eric Sesterhenn as part of a security audit of Git [2]. It was then contributed to the OSS-Fuzz repo in commit c58ac4492 (Git fuzzing: uncomment the existing and add new targets. (#11486), 2024-02-21) by Jaroslav Lobačevski. I (Josh Steadmon) have verified with both Eric and Jaroslav that they're OK with moving this test to the Git project. [1] https://github.com/google/oss-fuzz [2] https://ostif.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/X41-OSTIF-Gitlab-Git-Security-Audit-20230117-public.pdf Co-authored-by: Jaroslav Lobačevski <jarlob@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Josh Steadmon <steadmon@google.com> Signed-off-by: Josh Steadmon <steadmon@google.com> Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
2024-10-16fuzz: port fuzz-credential-from-url-gently from OSS-FuzzEric Sesterhenn
Git's fuzz tests are run continuously as part of OSS-Fuzz [1]. Several additional fuzz tests have been contributed directly to OSS-Fuzz; however, these tests are vulnerable to bitrot because they are not built during Git's CI runs, and thus breaking changes are much less likely to be noticed by Git contributors. Port one of these tests back to the Git project: fuzz-credential-from-url-gently This test was originally written by Eric Sesterhenn as part of a security audit of Git [2]. It was then contributed to the OSS-Fuzz repo in commit c58ac4492 (Git fuzzing: uncomment the existing and add new targets. (#11486), 2024-02-21) by Jaroslav Lobačevski. I (Josh Steadmon) have verified with both Eric and Jaroslav that they're OK with moving this test to the Git project. [1] https://github.com/google/oss-fuzz [2] https://ostif.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/X41-OSTIF-Gitlab-Git-Security-Audit-20230117-public.pdf Co-authored-by: Jaroslav Lobačevski <jarlob@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Josh Steadmon <steadmon@google.com> Signed-off-by: Josh Steadmon <steadmon@google.com> Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
2024-10-16t/test-lib: wire up NO_ICONV prerequisitePatrick Steinhardt
The iconv library is used by Git to reencode files, commit messages and other things. As such it is a rather integral part, but given that many platforms nowadays use UTF-8 everywhere you can live without support for reencoding in many situations. It is thus optional to build Git with iconv, and some of our platforms wired up in "config.mak.uname" disable it. But while we support building without it, running our test suite with "NO_ICONV=Yes" causes many test failures. Wire up a new test prerequisite ICONV that gets populated via our GIT-BUILD-OPTIONS. Annotate failing tests accordingly. Note that this commit does not do a deep dive into every single test to assess whether the failure is expected or not. Most of the tests do smell like the expected kind of failure though. Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im> Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
2024-10-11Makefile: fix dependency for $(UNIT_TEST_DIR)/clar/clar.oPhilippe Blain
The clar source file '$(UNIT_TEST_DIR)/clar/clar.c' includes the generated 'clar.suite', but this dependency is not taken into account by our Makefile, so that it is possible for a parallel build to fail if Make tries to build 'clar.o' before 'clar.suite' is generated. Correctly specify the dependency. Signed-off-by: Philippe Blain <levraiphilippeblain@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2024-10-10Merge branch 'ps/reftable-alloc-failures'Junio C Hamano
The reftable library is now prepared to expect that the memory allocation function given to it may fail to allocate and to deal with such an error. * ps/reftable-alloc-failures: (26 commits) reftable/basics: fix segfault when growing `names` array fails reftable/basics: ban standard allocator functions reftable: introduce `REFTABLE_FREE_AND_NULL()` reftable: fix calls to free(3P) reftable: handle trivial allocation failures reftable/tree: handle allocation failures reftable/pq: handle allocation failures when adding entries reftable/block: handle allocation failures reftable/blocksource: handle allocation failures reftable/iter: handle allocation failures when creating indexed table iter reftable/stack: handle allocation failures in auto compaction reftable/stack: handle allocation failures in `stack_compact_range()` reftable/stack: handle allocation failures in `reftable_new_stack()` reftable/stack: handle allocation failures on reload reftable/reader: handle allocation failures in `reader_init_iter()` reftable/reader: handle allocation failures for unindexed reader reftable/merged: handle allocation failures in `merged_table_init_iter()` reftable/writer: handle allocation failures in `reftable_new_writer()` reftable/writer: handle allocation failures in `writer_index_hash()` reftable/record: handle allocation failures when decoding records ...
2024-10-02reftable/basics: merge "publicbasics" into "basics"Patrick Steinhardt
The split between "basics" and "publicbasics" is somewhat arbitrary and not in line with how we typically structure code in the reftable library. While we do indeed split up headers into a public and internal part, we don't do that for the compilation unit itself. Furthermore, the declarations for "publicbasics.c" are in "reftable-malloc.h", which isn't in line with our naming schema, either. Fix these inconsistencies by: - Merging "publicbasics.c" into "basics.c". - Renaming "reftable-malloc.h" to "reftable-basics.h" as the public header. Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2024-10-02Merge branch 'tb/weak-sha1-for-tail-sum'Junio C Hamano
The checksum at the tail of files are now computed without collision detection protection. This is safe as the consumer of the information to protect itself from replay attacks checks for hash collisions independently. * tb/weak-sha1-for-tail-sum: csum-file.c: use unsafe SHA-1 implementation when available Makefile: allow specifying a SHA-1 for non-cryptographic uses hash.h: scaffolding for _unsafe hashing variants sha1: do not redefine `platform_SHA_CTX` and friends pack-objects: use finalize_object_file() to rename pack/idx/etc finalize_object_file(): implement collision check finalize_object_file(): refactor unlink_or_warn() placement finalize_object_file(): check for name collision before renaming
2024-09-27Makefile: allow specifying a SHA-1 for non-cryptographic usesTaylor Blau
Introduce _UNSAFE variants of the OPENSSL_SHA1, BLK_SHA1, and APPLE_COMMON_CRYPTO_SHA1 compile-time knobs which indicate which SHA-1 implementation is to be used for non-cryptographic uses. There are a couple of small implementation notes worth mentioning: - There is no way to select the collision detecting SHA-1 as the "fast" fallback, since the fast fallback is only for non-cryptographic uses, and is meant to be faster than our collision-detecting implementation. - There are no similar knobs for SHA-256, since no collision attacks are presently known and thus no collision-detecting implementations actually exist. Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2024-09-25Merge branch 'ps/reftable-exclude'Junio C Hamano
The reftable backend learned to more efficiently handle exclude patterns while enumerating the refs. * ps/reftable-exclude: refs/reftable: wire up support for exclude patterns reftable/reader: make table iterator reseekable t/unit-tests: introduce reftable library Makefile: stop listing test library objects twice builtin/receive-pack: fix exclude patterns when announcing refs refs: properly apply exclude patterns to namespaced refs
2024-09-18Merge branch 'ps/clar-unit-test'Junio C Hamano
Import clar unit tests framework libgit2 folks invented for our use. * ps/clar-unit-test: Makefile: rename clar-related variables to avoid confusion clar: add CMake support t/unit-tests: convert ctype tests to use clar t/unit-tests: convert strvec tests to use clar t/unit-tests: implement test driver Makefile: wire up the clar unit testing framework Makefile: do not use sparse on third-party sources Makefile: make hdr-check depend on generated headers Makefile: fix sparse dependency on GENERATED_H clar: stop including `shellapi.h` unnecessarily clar(win32): avoid compile error due to unused `fs_copy()` clar: avoid compile error with mingw-w64 t/clar: fix compatibility with NonStop t: import the clar unit testing framework t: do not pass GIT_TEST_OPTS to unit tests with prove
2024-09-16Merge branch 'cp/unit-test-reftable-stack'Junio C Hamano
Another reftable test migrated to the unit-test framework. * cp/unit-test-reftable-stack: t-reftable-stack: add test for stack iterators t-reftable-stack: add test for non-default compaction factor t-reftable-stack: use reftable_ref_record_equal() to compare ref records t-reftable-stack: use Git's tempfile API instead of mkstemp() t: harmonize t-reftable-stack.c with coding guidelines t: move reftable/stack_test.c to the unit testing framework
2024-09-16Merge branch 'ps/reftable-exclude' into ps/reftable-alloc-failuresJunio C Hamano
* ps/reftable-exclude: refs/reftable: wire up support for exclude patterns reftable/reader: make table iterator reseekable t/unit-tests: introduce reftable library Makefile: stop listing test library objects twice builtin/receive-pack: fix exclude patterns when announcing refs refs: properly apply exclude patterns to namespaced refs
2024-09-16Merge branch 'cp/unit-test-reftable-stack' into ps/reftable-alloc-failuresJunio C Hamano
* cp/unit-test-reftable-stack: t-reftable-stack: add test for stack iterators t-reftable-stack: add test for non-default compaction factor t-reftable-stack: use reftable_ref_record_equal() to compare ref records t-reftable-stack: use Git's tempfile API instead of mkstemp() t: harmonize t-reftable-stack.c with coding guidelines t: move reftable/stack_test.c to the unit testing framework
2024-09-16reftable/reader: make table iterator reseekablePatrick Steinhardt
In 67ce50ba26 (Merge branch 'ps/reftable-reusable-iterator', 2024-05-30) we have refactored the interface of reftable iterators such that they can be reused in theory. This patch series only landed the required changes on the interface level, but didn't yet implement the actual logic to make iterators reusable. As it turns out almost all of the infrastructure already does support re-seeking. The only exception is the table iterator, which does not reset its `is_finished` bit. Do so and add a couple of tests that verify that we can re-seek iterators. Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2024-09-16t/unit-tests: introduce reftable libraryPatrick Steinhardt
We have recently migrated all of the reftable unit tests that were part of the reftable library into our own unit testing framework. As part of that migration we have duplicated some of the functionality that was part of the reftable test framework into each of the migrated test suites. This was a sensible decision to not have all of the migrations dependent on each other, but now that the migration is done it makes sense to deduplicate the functionality again. Introduce a new reftable test library that hosts some shared code and adapt tests to use it. Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2024-09-16Makefile: stop listing test library objects twicePatrick Steinhardt
Whenever one adds another test library compilation unit one has to wire it up twice in the Makefile: once to append it to `UNIT_TEST_OBJS`, and once to append it to the `UNIT_TEST_PROGS` target. Ideally, we'd just reuse the `UNIT_TEST_OBJS` variable in the target so that we can avoid the duplication. But it also contains all the objects for our test programs, each of which contains a `cmd_main()`, and thus we cannot link them all into the target executable. Refactor the code such that `UNIT_TEST_OBJS` does not contain the unit test program objects anymore, which we can instead manually append to the `OBJECTS` variable. Like this, the former variable now only contains objects for test libraries and can thus be reused. Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2024-09-12Merge branch 'gt/unit-test-oid-array'Junio C Hamano
Another unit-test. * gt/unit-test-oid-array: t: port helper/test-oid-array.c to unit-tests/t-oid-array.c
2024-09-10Makefile: rename clar-related variables to avoid confusionPatrick Steinhardt
The Makefile variables related to the recently-introduced clar testing framework have a `UNIT_TESTS_` prefix. This prefix is extremely similar to the prefix used by our other unit tests that use our homegrown unit testing framework, which is `UNIT_TEST_`. The consequence is that it is easy to misread the names and confuse them with each other. Rename the clar-related variables to instead have a `CLAR_TEST_` prefix to address this. Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2024-09-08t: move reftable/stack_test.c to the unit testing frameworkChandra Pratap
reftable/stack_test.c exercises the functions defined in reftable/stack.{c, h}. Migrate reftable/stack_test.c to the unit testing framework. Migration involves refactoring the tests to use the unit testing framework instead of reftable's test framework and renaming the tests to be in-line with unit-tests' standards. Since some of the tests use set_test_hash() defined by reftable/test_framework.{c, h} but these files are not '#included' in the test file, copy this function in the ported test file. With the migration of stack test to the unit-tests framework, "test-tool reftable" becomes a no-op. Hence, get rid of everything that uses "test-tool reftable" alongside everything that is used to implement it. While at it, alphabetically sort the cmds[] list in helper/test-tool.c by moving the entry for "dump-reftable". Mentored-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im> Mentored-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org> Signed-off-by: Chandra Pratap <chandrapratap3519@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2024-09-04t/unit-tests: convert ctype tests to use clarPatrick Steinhardt
Convert the ctype tests to use the new clar unit testing framework. Introduce a new function `cl_failf()` that allows us to print a formatted error message, which we can use to point out which of the characters was classified incorrectly. This results in output like this on failure: # start of suite 1: ctype not ok 1 - ctype::isspace --- reason: | Test failed. 0x0d is classified incorrectly: expected 0, got 1 at: file: 't/unit-tests/ctype.c' line: 36 function: 'test_ctype__isspace' --- ok 2 - ctype::isdigit ok 3 - ctype::isalpha ok 4 - ctype::isalnum ok 5 - ctype::is_glob_special ok 6 - ctype::is_regex_special ok 7 - ctype::is_pathspec_magic ok 8 - ctype::isascii ok 9 - ctype::islower ok 10 - ctype::isupper ok 11 - ctype::iscntrl ok 12 - ctype::ispunct ok 13 - ctype::isxdigit ok 14 - ctype::isprint Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2024-09-04t/unit-tests: convert strvec tests to use clarPatrick Steinhardt
Convert the strvec tests to use the new clar unit testing framework. This is a first test balloon that demonstrates how the testing infra for clar-based tests looks like. The tests are part of the "t/unit-tests/bin/unit-tests" binary. When running that binary with an injected error, it generates TAP output: # ./t/unit-tests/bin/unit-tests TAP version 13 # start of suite 1: strvec ok 1 - strvec::init ok 2 - strvec::dynamic_init ok 3 - strvec::clear not ok 4 - strvec::push --- reason: | String mismatch: (&vec)->v[i] != expect[i] 'foo' != 'fo' (at byte 2) at: file: 't/unit-tests/strvec.c' line: 48 function: 'test_strvec__push' --- ok 5 - strvec::pushf ok 6 - strvec::pushl ok 7 - strvec::pushv ok 8 - strvec::replace_at_head ok 9 - strvec::replace_at_tail ok 10 - strvec::replace_in_between ok 11 - strvec::replace_with_substring ok 12 - strvec::remove_at_head ok 13 - strvec::remove_at_tail ok 14 - strvec::remove_in_between ok 15 - strvec::pop_empty_array ok 16 - strvec::pop_non_empty_array ok 17 - strvec::split_empty_string ok 18 - strvec::split_single_item ok 19 - strvec::split_multiple_items ok 20 - strvec::split_whitespace_only ok 21 - strvec::split_multiple_consecutive_whitespaces ok 22 - strvec::detach 1..22 The binary also supports some parameters that allow us to run only a subset of unit tests or alter the output: $ ./t/unit-tests/bin/unit-tests -h Usage: ./t/unit-tests/bin/unit-tests [options] Options: -sname Run only the suite with `name` (can go to individual test name) -iname Include the suite with `name` -xname Exclude the suite with `name` -v Increase verbosity (show suite names) -q Only report tests that had an error -Q Quit as soon as a test fails -t Display results in tap format -l Print suite names -r[filename] Write summary file (to the optional filename) Furthermore, running `make unit-tests` runs the binary along with all the other unit tests we have. Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2024-09-04Makefile: wire up the clar unit testing frameworkPatrick Steinhardt
Wire up the clar unit testing framework by introducing a new "unit-tests" executable. In contrast to the existing framework, this will result in a single executable for all test suites. The ability to pick specific tests to execute is retained via functionality built into the clar itself. Note that we need to be a bit careful about how we need to invalidate our Makefile rules. While we obviously have to regenerate the clar suite when our test suites change, we also have to invalidate it in case any of the test suites gets removed. We do so by using our typical pattern of creating a `GIT-TEST-SUITES` file that gets updated whenever the set of test suites changes, so that we can easily depend on that file. Another specialty is that we generate a "clar-decls.h" file. The test functions are neither static, nor do they have external declarations. This is because they are getting parsed via "generate.py", which then creates the external generations that get populated into an array. These declarations are only seen by the main function though. The consequence is that we will get a bunch of "missing prototypes" errors from our compiler for each of these test functions. To fix those errors, we extract the `extern` declarations from "clar.suite" and put them into a standalone header that then gets included by each of our unit tests. This gets rid of compiler warnings for every function which has been extracted by "generate.py". More importantly though, it does _not_ get rid of warnings in case a function really isn't being used by anything. Thus, it would cause a compiler error if a function name was mistyped and thus not picked up by "generate.py". The test driver "unit-test.c" is an empty stub for now. It will get implemented in the next commit. Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2024-09-04Makefile: do not use sparse on third-party sourcesPatrick Steinhardt
We have several third-party sources in our codebase that we have imported from upstream projects. These sources are mostly excluded from our static analysis, for example when running Coccinelle. Do the same for our "sparse" target by filtering them out. Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2024-09-04Makefile: make hdr-check depend on generated headersPatrick Steinhardt
The "hdr-check" Makefile target compiles each of our headers as a standalone code unit to ensure that they are not missing any type declarations and can be included standalone. With the next commit we will wire up the clar unit testing framework, which will have the effect that some headers start depending on generated ones. While we could declare that dependency explicitly, it does not really feel very maintainable in the future. Instead, we do the same as in the preceding commit and have the objects depend on all of our generated headers. While again overly broad, it is easy to maintain and generating headers is not an expensive thing to do anyway. Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2024-09-04Makefile: fix sparse dependency on GENERATED_HPatrick Steinhardt
The "check" Makefile target is essentially an alias around the "sparse" target. The one difference though is that it will tell users to instead run the "test" target in case they do not have sparse(1) installed, as chances are high that they wanted to execute the test suite rather than doing semantic checks. But even though the "check" target ultimately just ends up executing `make sparse`, it still depends on our generated headers. This does not make any sense though: they are irrelevant for the "test" target advice, and if these headers are required for the "sparse" target they must be declared as a dependency on the aliased target, not the alias. But even moving the dependency to the "sparse" target is wrong, as concurrent builds may then end up generating the headers and running sparse concurrently. Instead, we make them a dependency of the specific objects. While that is overly broad, it does ensure correct ordering. The alternative, specifying which file depends on what generated header explicitly, feels rather unmaintainable. Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2024-09-04t: import the clar unit testing frameworkPatrick Steinhardt
Our unit testing framework is a homegrown solution. While it supports most of our needs, it is likely that the volume of unit tests will grow quite a bit in the future such that we can exercise low-level subsystems directly. This surfaces several shortcomings that the current solution has: - There is no way to run only one specific tests. While some of our unit tests wire this up manually, others don't. In general, it requires quite a bit of boilerplate to get this set up correctly. - Failures do not cause a test to stop execution directly. Instead, the test author needs to return manually whenever an assertion fails. This is rather verbose and is not done correctly in most of our unit tests. - Wiring up a new testcase requires both implementing the test function and calling it in the respective test suite's main function, which is creating code duplication. We can of course fix all of these issues ourselves, but that feels rather pointless when there are already so many unit testing frameworks out there that have those features. We line out some requirements for any unit testing framework in "Documentation/technical/unit-tests.txt". The "clar" unit testing framework, which isn't listed in that table yet, ticks many of the boxes: - It is licensed under ISC, which is compatible. - It is easily vendorable because it is rather tiny at around 1200 lines of code. - It is easily hackable due to the same reason. - It has TAP support. - It has skippable tests. - It preprocesses test files in order to extract test functions, which then get wired up automatically. While it's not perfect, the fact that clar originates from the libgit2 project means that it should be rather easy for us to collaborate with upstream to plug any gaps. Import the clar unit testing framework at commit 1516124 (Merge pull request #97 from pks-t/pks-whitespace-fixes, 2024-08-15). The framework will be wired up in subsequent commits. Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2024-09-03Merge branch 'dh/runtime-prefix-on-zos'Junio C Hamano
Support for the RUNTIME_PREFIX feature has been added to z/OS port. * dh/runtime-prefix-on-zos: exec_cmd: RUNTIME_PREFIX on z/OS systems
2024-09-01t: port helper/test-oid-array.c to unit-tests/t-oid-array.cGhanshyam Thakkar
helper/test-oid-array.c along with t0064-oid-array.sh test the oid-array.h API, which provides storage and processing efficiency over large lists of object identifiers. Migrate them to the unit testing framework for better runtime performance and efficiency. As we don't initialize a repository in these tests, the hash algo that functions like oid_array_lookup() use is not initialized, therefore call repo_set_hash_algo() to initialize it. And init_hash_algo():lib-oid.c can aid in this process, so make it public. Mentored-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org> Mentored-by: Kaartic Sivaraam <kaartic.sivaraam@gmail.com> Helped-by: Phillip Wood <phillip.wood123@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Ghanshyam Thakkar <shyamthakkar001@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2024-08-29Merge branch 'cp/unit-test-reftable-block'Junio C Hamano
Another test for reftable library ported to the unit test framework. * cp/unit-test-reftable-block: t-reftable-block: mark unused argv/argc t-reftable-block: add tests for index blocks t-reftable-block: add tests for obj blocks t-reftable-block: add tests for log blocks t-reftable-block: remove unnecessary variable 'j' t-reftable-block: use xstrfmt() instead of xstrdup() t-reftable-block: use block_iter_reset() instead of block_iter_close() t-reftable-block: use reftable_record_key() instead of strbuf_addstr() t-reftable-block: use reftable_record_equal() instead of check_str() t-reftable-block: release used block reader t: harmonize t-reftable-block.c with coding guidelines t: move reftable/block_test.c to the unit testing framework
2024-08-29Merge branch 'ps/reftable-drop-generic'Junio C Hamano
The code in the reftable library has been cleaned up by discarding unused "generic" interface. * ps/reftable-drop-generic: reftable: mark unused parameters in empty iterator functions reftable/generic: drop interface t/helper: refactor to not use `struct reftable_table` t/helper: use `hash_to_hex_algop()` to print hashes t/helper: inline printing of reftable records t/helper: inline `reftable_table_print()` t/helper: inline `reftable_stack_print_directory()` t/helper: inline `reftable_reader_print_file()` t/helper: inline `reftable_dump_main()` reftable/dump: drop unused `compact_stack()` reftable/generic: move generic iterator code into iterator interface reftable/iter: drop double-checking logic reftable/stack: open-code reading refs reftable/merged: stop using generic tables in the merged table reftable/merged: rename `reftable_new_merged_table()` reftable/merged: expose functions to initialize iterators
2024-08-28Merge branch 'gt/unit-test-urlmatch-normalization'Junio C Hamano
Another rewrite of test. * gt/unit-test-urlmatch-normalization: t: migrate t0110-urlmatch-normalization to the new framework
2024-08-23Merge branch 'cp/unit-test-reftable-readwrite'Junio C Hamano
* cp/unit-test-reftable-readwrite: t-reftable-readwrite: add test for known error t-reftable-readwrite: use 'for' in place of infinite 'while' loops t-reftable-readwrite: use free_names() instead of a for loop t: move reftable/readwrite_test.c to the unit testing framework
2024-08-22exec_cmd: RUNTIME_PREFIX on z/OS systemsD Harithamma
Enable Git to resolve its own binary location using __getprogramdir and getprogname. Since /proc is not a mandatory filesystem on z/OS, we cannot rely on the git_get_exec_path_procfs method to determine Git's executable path. To address this, we have implemented git_get_exec_path_zos, which resolves the executable path by extracting it from the current program's directory and filename. Signed-off-by: D Harithamma <harithamma.d@ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>