Add an implementation for base-85 encoding and decoding [1]. Git binary
patches use this format.
Base-85 encoding assembles bytes as 32-bit MSB values, then converts
these values to base-85 numbers (always 5 bytes) encoded as printable
ASCII characters. Decoding base-85 is the reverse operation. Note
that decoding may overflow on invalid input as 85^5 > 2^32. Encodings
always have a length that is a multiple of 5. If input length is not
divisible by 4, padding bytes are (logically) added, which are ignored
when decoding. The encoding for n bytes has thus always exactly length
(n + 3) / 4 * 5 in integer arithmetic (truncating division).
Includes tests.
[1] https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc1924
Bug: 371725
Change-Id: Ib5b9a503cd62cf70e080a4fb38c8cd1eeeaebcfe
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Applying a patch on Windows failed if the patch had the (normal)
single-LF line endings, but the file on disk had the usual Windows
CR-LF line endings.
Git (and JGit) compute diffs on the git-internal blob, i.e., after
CR-LF transformation and clean filtering. Applying patches to files
directly is thus incorrect and may fail if CR-LF settings don't
match, or if clean/smudge filtering is involved.
Change ApplyCommand to run the file content through the check-in
filters before applying the patch, and run the result through the
check-out filters. This makes patch application succeed even if the
patch has single-LFs, but the file has CR-LF and core.autocrlf is
true.
Add tests for various combinations of line endings in the file and in
the patch, and a test to verify the clean/smudge handling.
See also [1].
Running the file though clean/smudge may give strange results with
LFS-managed files. JGit's DiffFormatter has some extra code and
applies the smudge filter again after having run the file through
the check-in filters (CR-LF and clean). So JGit can actually produce
a diff on LFS-managed files using the normal diff machinery. (If it
doesn't run out of memory, that is. After all, LFS is intended for
_large_ files.) How such a diff would be applied with either C git
or JGit is entirely unclear; neither has any code for this special
case. Compare also [2].
Note that C git just doesn't know about LFS and always diffs after
the check-in filter chain, so for LFS files, it'll produce a diff
of the LFS pointers.
[1] https://github.com/git/git/commit/c24f3abac
[2] https://github.com/git-lfs/git-lfs/issues/440
Bug: 571585
Change-Id: I8f71ff26313b5773ff1da612b0938ad2f18751f5
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
Use Character.isWhitespace() instead of Character.isSpaceChar() to
treat TABs as whitespace, too.
Change-Id: Iffc59c13357d981ede6a1e0feb6ea6ff03fb3064
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
Negated patterns were handled wrongly. According to the OpenBSD
ssh_config man page,[1] a negated pattern never matches. Negated
patterns make only sense if there are positive patterns; the
negated pattern then can define exceptions for the positive
patterns.
OpenSshConfigFile did this wrongly. It handled "!foo" as "matching
everything but foo", but actually the semantics is "if the input is
"foo", this entry doesn't apply. If the input is anything else,
other patterns determine whether the entry may apply.".
[1] https://man.openbsd.org/ssh_config
Change-Id: I50f6e46581b7ece4c949eddf62f4a265573ec29e
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
* stable-5.12:
Remove texts which were added by mistake in 00386272
Fix formatting which was broken in 00386272
Change-Id: I1c936183e1fa17ea95ada7849a75bc76af275fa3
* stable-5.11:
Remove texts which were added by mistake in 00386272
Fix formatting which was broken in 00386272
Change-Id: I6184772bdeca1b9ccecf6e400ae15604ab4f5a69
* stable-5.10:
Remove texts which were added by mistake in 00386272
Fix formatting which was broken in 00386272
Change-Id: I0f1511be5375716d41565e72b271cb956c3e847b
* stable-5.9:
Remove texts which were added by mistake in 00386272
Fix formatting which was broken in 00386272
Change-Id: Ifa135077d8d07d2317df3b479822e30d87eca950
* stable-5.8:
Remove texts which were added by mistake in 00386272
Fix formatting which was broken in 00386272
Change-Id: I9ca7a0237f87d1d4bcaba81e709eaa67902f27e5
* stable-5.7:
Remove texts which were added by mistake in 00386272
Fix formatting which was broken in 00386272
Change-Id: I7ed3f47cb46e6c1bf483702c8925a24e88658e47
* stable-5.6:
Remove texts which were added by mistake in 00386272
Fix formatting which was broken in 00386272
Change-Id: I45d444b360485564744bf3dfad2c2f5a5e7fcdf6
* stable-5.9:
LockFile: create OutputStream only when needed
Remove ReftableNumbersNotIncreasingException
Fix stamping to produce stable file timestamps
Change-Id: I056382d1d93f3e0a95838bdd1f0be89711c8a722
Don't create the stream eagerly in lock(); that may cause JGit to
exceed OS or JVM limits on open file descriptors if many locks need
to be created, for instance when creating many refs. Instead create
the output stream only when one really needs to write something.
Bug: 573328
Change-Id: If9441ed40494d46f594a896d34a5c4f56f91ebf4
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
Don't create the stream eagerly in lock(); that may cause JGit to
exceed OS or JVM limits on open file descriptors if many locks need
to be created, for instance when creating many refs. Instead create
the output stream only when one really needs to write something.
Bug: 573328
Change-Id: If9441ed40494d46f594a896d34a5c4f56f91ebf4
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
Git has different conflict resolution strategies:
* There is a tree merge strategy "ours" which just ignores any changes
from theirs ("-s ours"). JGit also has the mirror strategy "theirs"
ignoring any changes from "ours". (This doesn't exist in C git.)
Adapt StashApplyCommand and CherrypickCommand to be able to use those
tree merge strategies.
* For the resolve/recursive tree merge strategies, there are content
conflict resolution strategies "ours" and "theirs", which resolve
any conflict hunks by taking the "ours" or "theirs" hunk. In C git
those correspond to "-Xours" or -Xtheirs". Implement that in
MergeAlgorithm, and add API to set and pass through such a strategy
for resolving content conflicts.
* The "ours/theirs" content conflict resolution strategies also apply
for binary files. Handle these cases in ResolveMerger.
Note that the content conflict resolution strategies ("-X ours/theirs")
do _not_ apply to modify/delete or delete/modify conflicts. Such
conflicts are always reported as conflicts by C git. They do apply,
however, if one side completely clears a file's content.
Bug: 501111
Change-Id: I2c9c170c61c440a2ab9c387991e7a0c3ab960e07
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Similar to https://git.eclipse.org/r/c/jgit/jgit/+/175166, ignore
path that have conflicts on attributes, so that the virtual base could
be used by RecursiveMerger.
Change-Id: I99c95445a305558d55bbb9c9e97446caaf61c154
Signed-off-by: Marija Savtchouk <mariasavtchouk@google.com>
Similar to git config file reading lock the file only when writing.
There may still be lock conflicts on writing, but those in the worst
case result in an entry not being added and thus being asked for later
again.
Because the OpenSshServerkeyDatabase and its HostKeyFiles may be (and
usually are) shared between different SSH sessions, we still need to
ensure in-process mutual exclusion.
Bug: 559548
Change-Id: I4af97628deff9eaac2520576917c856949f2680d
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
o.e.j.ssh.apache produces passphrase prompts containing
InformationalMessage items to show the fingerprint of the key
the passphrase is being asked for. Allow this so that the credentials
provider can be used with o.e.j.ssh.apache.
Change-Id: Ibc2ffd3a987d3118952726091b9b80442972dfd8
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
OpenSSH 8.4 has introduced simple environment variable substitution
for some keys. Implement that feature in our ssh config file parser,
too.
Bug: 572103
Change-Id: I360f2c5510eea4ec3329aeedf3d29dfefc9163f0
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
Apache MINA sshd has an implementation of this, but it doesn't comply
to RFC 8308 [1] and it is buggy. (See SSHD-1141 [2].)
Add a simpler KexExtensionHandler and if the server sends extension
server-sig-algs, use its value to re-order the chosen signature
algorithms such that the algorithms the server announced as supported
are at the front.
If the server didn't tell us anything, don't do anything. RFC 8308
suggests for RSA to default to ssh-rsa, but says once rsa-sha2-* was
"widely enough" adopted, defaulting to that might be OK.
Currently we seem to be in a transition phase; Fedora 33 has already
disabled ssh-rsa by default, and openssh is about to do so. Whatever
we might do without info from the server, it'd be good for some servers
and bad for others. So don't do anything and let the user re-order via
ssh config PubkeyAcceptedAlgorithms on a case-by-case basis.
[1] https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc8308
[2] https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/SSHD-1141
Bug: 572056
Change-Id: I59aa691a030ffe0fae54289df00ca5c6e165817b
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>