Archived zip files for a same commit have different MD5 hash because
mdate and mdate in the header of zip entries are not specified. In
this case, Commons Compress sets an archived time.
In the original git implementation, it's set a commit time:
e2b2d6a172/archive.c (L378)
By this fix, archive command sets the commit time to ZipArchiveEntry
when RevCommit is given as an archiving target.
Change-Id: I30dd8710e910cdf42d57742f8709e9803930a123
Signed-off-by: Naoki Takezoe <takezoe@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David Pursehouse <david.pursehouse@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Update the project-specific Eclipse settings to replace the use of the
org.eclipse.jdt.annotation.Nullable class the new JGit-specific
@Nullable annotation. I verified that Eclipse reports errors when the
return value of a method annotated with
@org.eclipse.jgit.annotations.Nullable is dereferenced without a null
check.
Also remove the Maven and MANIFEST.MF dependencies on
org.eclipse.jdt.annotation.
Eclipse null analysis uses three annotations: @Nullable, @NonNull and
@NonNullByDefault. All three are updated in this patch because it is
invalid to set the Eclipse preferences to empty values. So far only
@Nullable has been introduced in org.eclipse.jgit.annotations.
My personal preference is to follow the advice in Effective Java and
avoid the null-return idiom, and to avoid passing null values in
general. This sets the expectation is that arguments and return types
are assumed non-null unless otherwise documented. If that is the
expectation, then consistent application of @NonNull is redundant and
hurts readability by cluttering the code, obscuring the occasional
@Nullable annotation that really requires attention.
If the JGit community decides there is value in using the @NonNull and
@NonNullByDefault annotations we can add them--this change configures
Eclipse to use them.
Change-Id: I9af1b786d1b44b9b0d9c609480dc842df79bf698
Signed-off-by: Terry Parker <tparker@google.com>
- don't mark them as singleton to allow coexistence of multiple versions
in the same installation
- add missing version qualifier to Eclipse-SourceBundle header
see
https://dev.eclipse.org/mhonarc/lists/cross-project-issues-dev/msg10524.html
Change-Id: Ie4e028038f5a1d3e18b0be06c3d2ea82e7f9068d
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
The archive bundle needs access to the nls package since 2ecc27db.
Change-Id: I76882e1f270296c5ce8e220e1946c4a8ddb6fdf5
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Attempts to write entries with too-long filenames currently error out:
$ jgit.pgm/target/jgit archive HEAD >test.tar
java.lang.RuntimeException: file name 'org.eclipse.jgit.http.server/src/org/eclipse/jgit/http/server/resolver/DefaultReceivePackFactory.java' is too long ( > 100 bytes)
at org.apache.commons.compress.archivers.tar.TarArchiveOutputStream.putArchiveEntry(TarArchiveOutputStream.java:288)
at org.eclipse.jgit.archive.TarFormat.putEntry(TarFormat.java:92)
at org.eclipse.jgit.archive.TarFormat.putEntry(TarFormat.java:62)
at org.eclipse.jgit.api.ArchiveCommand.writeArchive(ArchiveCommand.java:293)
at org.eclipse.jgit.api.ArchiveCommand.call(ArchiveCommand.java:322)
at org.eclipse.jgit.pgm.Archive.run(Archive.java:97)
at org.eclipse.jgit.pgm.TextBuiltin.execute(TextBuiltin.java:174)
at org.eclipse.jgit.pgm.Main.execute(Main.java:213)
at org.eclipse.jgit.pgm.Main.run(Main.java:121)
at org.eclipse.jgit.pgm.Main.main(Main.java:95)
That's because the default longFileMode is LONGFILE_ERROR, which
throws an exception for filenames longer than 100 characters. Switch
to LONGFILE_POSIX. While at it, handle large files and filenames with
strange encodings, too.
This requires commons compress 1.4, which introduced support for large
files and POSIX long filenames.
Change-Id: I04d5427eec0968b129f55d7a4c6021039a494828
OSGi 4.01 comes with package org.osgi.framework version 1.3 [1] which
has the BundleActivator interface needed by org.eclipse.jgit.archive.
OSGi 5.0 matches package org.osgi.framework version 1.7 [2].
[1] http://www.osgi.org/javadoc/r4v401/
[2] http://www.osgi.org/javadoc/r5/core/
Change-Id: I10f78e5eb02b5d03395f23d2f0ad039caf565269
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Allow use of ArchiveCommand without depending on the jgit command-line
tools.
To avoid complicating the process of installing and upgrading JGit,
this does not add a dependency by the org.eclipse.jgit bundle on
commons-compress. Instead, the caller is responsible for registering
any formats they want to use by calling ArchiveCommand.registerFormat.
This patch puts functionality that requires an archiver into a
separate org.eclipse.jgit.archive bundle for people who want it. One
can use it by calling ArchiveCommand.registerFormat directly to
register its formats or by relying on OSGi class loading to load
org.eclipse.jgit.archive.FormatActivator, which takes care of
registration automatically.
Once the appropriate formats are registered, you can make a tar or zip
from a git tree object as follows:
ArchiveCommand cmd = git.archive();
try {
cmd.setTree(tree).setFormat(fmt).setOutputStream(out).call();
} finally {
cmd.release();
}
Change-Id: I418e7e7d76422dc6f010d0b3b624d7bec3b20c6e