Clean up branch thicket in preparation for v2.55.0#6277
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dscho merged 305 commits intoJun 11, 2026
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This will help with Git for Windows' maintenance going forward: It allows Git for Windows to switch its primary libcurl to a variant without the OpenSSL backend, while still loading an alternate when setting `http.sslBackend = openssl`. This is necessary to avoid maintenance headaches with upgrading OpenSSL: its major version name is encoded in the shared library's file name and hence major version updates (temporarily) break libraries that are linked against the OpenSSL library. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
In Git for Windows v2.39.0, we fixed a regression where `git.exe` would no longer work in Windows Nano Server (frequently used in Docker containers). This GitHub workflow can be used to verify manually that the Git/Scalar executables work in Nano Server. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
When running Git for Windows on a remote APFS filesystem, it would appear that the `mingw_open_append()`/`write()` combination would fail almost exactly like on some CIFS-mounted shares as had been reported in #2753, albeit with a different `errno` value. Let's handle that `errno` value just the same, by suggesting to set `windows.appendAtomically=false`. Signed-off-by: David Lomas <dl3@pale-eds.co.uk> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Windows 10 version 1511 (also known as Anniversary Update), according to https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/console/console-virtual-terminal-sequences introduced native support for ANSI sequence processing. This allows using colors from the entire 24-bit color range. All we need to do is test whether the console's "virtual processing support" can be enabled. If it can, we do not even need to start the `console_thread` to handle ANSI sequences. Or, almost all we need to do: When `console_thread()` does its work, it uses the Unicode-aware `write_console()` function to write to the Win32 Console, which supports Git for Windows' implicit convention that all text that is written is encoded in UTF-8. The same is not necessarily true if native ANSI sequence processing is used, as the output is then subject to the current code page. Let's ensure that the code page is set to `CP_UTF8` as long as Git writes to it. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
By default, the buffer type of Windows' `stdout` is unbuffered (_IONBF), and there is no need to manually fflush `stdout`. But some programs, such as the Windows Filtering Platform driver provided by the security software, may change the buffer type of `stdout` to full buffering. This nees `fflush(stdout)` to be called manually, otherwise there will be no output to `stdout`. Signed-off-by: MinarKotonoha <chengzhuo5@qq.com> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
A long time ago, we decided to run tests in Git for Windows' SDK with the default `winsymlinks` mode: copying instead of linking. This is still the default mode of MSYS2 to this day. However, this is not how most users run Git for Windows: As the majority of Git for Windows' users seem to be on Windows 10 and newer, likely having enabled Developer Mode (which allows creating symbolic links without administrator privileges), they will run with symlink support enabled. This is the reason why it is crucial to get the fixes for CVE-2024-? to the users, and also why it is crucial to ensure that the test suite exercises the related test cases. This commit ensures the latter. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
The `__MINGW64__` constant is defined, surprise, surprise, only when
building for a 64-bit CPU architecture.
Therefore using it as a guard to define `_POSIX_C_SOURCE` (so that
`localtime_r()` is declared, among other functions) is not enough, we
also need to check `__MINGW32__`.
Technically, the latter constant is defined even for 64-bit builds. But
let's make things a bit easier to understand by testing for both
constants.
Making it so fixes this compile warning (turned error in GCC v14.1):
archive-zip.c: In function 'dos_time':
archive-zip.c:612:9: error: implicit declaration of function 'localtime_r';
did you mean 'localtime_s'? [-Wimplicit-function-declaration]
612 | localtime_r(&time, &tm);
| ^~~~~~~~~~~
| localtime_s
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
In order to be a better Windows citizenship, Git should save its configuration files on AppData folder. This can enables git configuration files be replicated between machines using the same Microsoft account logon which would reduce the friction of setting up Git on new systems. Therefore, if %APPDATA%\Git\config exists, we use it; otherwise $HOME/.config/git/config is used. Signed-off-by: Ariel Lourenco <ariellourenco@users.noreply.github.com>
Git LFS is now built with Go 1.21 which no longer supports Windows 7. However, Git for Windows still wants to support Windows 7. Ideally, Git LFS would re-introduce Windows 7 support until Git for Windows drops support for Windows 7, but that's not going to happen: #4996 (comment) The next best thing we can do is to let the users know what is happening, and how to get out of their fix, at least. This is not quite as easy as it would first seem because programs compiled with Go 1.21 or newer will simply throw an exception and fail with an Access Violation on Windows 7. The only way I found to address this is to replicate the logic from Go's very own `version` command (which can determine the Go version with which a given executable was built) to detect the situation, and in that case offer a helpful error message. This addresses #4996. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Start work on a new 'git survey' command to scan the repository for monorepo performance and scaling problems. The goal is to measure the various known "dimensions of scale" and serve as a foundation for adding additional measurements as we learn more about Git monorepo scaling problems. The initial goal is to complement the scanning and analysis performed by the GO-based 'git-sizer' (https://github.com/github/git-sizer) tool. It is hoped that by creating a builtin command, we may be able to take advantage of internal Git data structures and code that is not accessible from GO to gain further insight into potential scaling problems. Co-authored-by: Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Jeff Hostetler <git@jeffhostetler.com> Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com>
By default we will scan all references in "refs/heads/", "refs/tags/" and "refs/remotes/". Add command line opts let the use ask for all refs or a subset of them and to include a detached HEAD. Signed-off-by: Jeff Hostetler <git@jeffhostetler.com> Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
When 'git survey' provides information to the user, this will be presented in one of two formats: plaintext and JSON. The JSON implementation will be delayed until the functionality is complete for the plaintext format. The most important parts of the plaintext format are headers specifying the different sections of the report and tables providing concreted data. Create a custom table data structure that allows specifying a list of strings for the row values. When printing the table, check each column for the maximum width so we can create a table of the correct size from the start. The table structure is designed to be flexible to the different kinds of output that will be implemented in future changes. Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com>
At the moment, nothing is obvious about the reason for the use of the
path-walk API, but this will become more prevelant in future iterations. For
now, use the path-walk API to sum up the counts of each kind of object.
For example, this is the reachable object summary output for my local repo:
REACHABLE OBJECT SUMMARY
========================
Object Type | Count
------------+-------
Tags | 1343
Commits | 179344
Trees | 314350
Blobs | 184030
Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com>
Now that we have explored objects by count, we can expand that a bit more to summarize the data for the on-disk and inflated size of those objects. This information is helpful for diagnosing both why disk space (and perhaps clone or fetch times) is growing but also why certain operations are slow because the inflated size of the abstract objects that must be processed is so large. Note: zlib-ng is slightly more efficient even at those small sizes. Even between zlib versions, there are slight differences in compression. To accommodate for that in the tests, not the exact numbers but some rough approximations are validated (the test should validate `git survey`, after all, not zlib). Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com>
In future changes, we will make use of these methods. The intention is to keep track of the top contributors according to some metric. We don't want to store all of the entries and do a sort at the end, so track a constant-size table and remove rows that get pushed out depending on the chosen sorting algorithm. Co-authored-by: Jeff Hostetler <git@jeffhostetler.com> Signed-off-by; Jeff Hostetler <git@jeffhostetler.com> Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com>
Since we are already walking our reachable objects using the path-walk API,
let's now collect lists of the paths that contribute most to different
metrics. Specifically, we care about
* Number of versions.
* Total size on disk.
* Total inflated size (no delta or zlib compression).
This information can be critical to discovering which parts of the
repository are causing the most growth, especially on-disk size. Different
packing strategies might help compress data more efficiently, but the toal
inflated size is a representation of the raw size of all snapshots of those
paths. Even when stored efficiently on disk, that size represents how much
information must be processed to complete a command such as 'git blame'.
The exact disk size seems to be not quite robust enough for testing, as
could be seen by the `linux-musl-meson` job consistently failing, possibly
because of zlib-ng deflates differently: t8100.4(git survey
(default)) was failing with a symptom like this:
TOTAL OBJECT SIZES BY TYPE
===============================================
Object Type | Count | Disk Size | Inflated Size
------------+-------+-----------+--------------
- Commits | 10 | 1523 | 2153
+ Commits | 10 | 1528 | 2153
Trees | 10 | 495 | 1706
Blobs | 10 | 191 | 101
- Tags | 4 | 510 | 528
+ Tags | 4 | 547 | 528
This means: the disk size is unlikely something we can verify robustly.
Since zlib-ng seems to increase the disk size of the tags from 528 to
547, we cannot even assume that the disk size is always smaller than the
inflated size. We will most likely want to either skip verifying the
disk size altogether, or go for some kind of fuzzy matching, say, by
replacing `s/ 1[45][0-9][0-9] / ~1.5k /` and `s/ [45][0-9][0-9] / ~½k /`
or something like that.
Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
The 'git survey' builtin provides several detail tables, such as "top files by on-disk size". The size of these tables defaults to 10, currently. Allow the user to specify this number via a new --top=<N> option or the new survey.top config key. Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
The sparse tree walk algorithm was created in d5d2e93 (revision: implement sparse algorithm, 2019-01-16) and involves using the mark_trees_uninteresting_sparse() method. This method takes a repository and an oidset of tree IDs, some of which have the UNINTERESTING flag and some of which do not. Create a method that has an equivalent set of preconditions but uses a "dense" walk (recursively visits all reachable trees, as long as they have not previously been marked UNINTERESTING). This is an important difference from mark_tree_uninteresting(), which short-circuits if the given tree has the UNINTERESTING flag. A use of this method will be added in a later change, with a condition set whether the sparse or dense approach should be used. Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com>
While this command is definitely something we _want_, chances are that upstreaming this will require substantial changes. We still want to be able to experiment with this before that, to focus on what we need out of this command: To assist with diagnosing issues with large repositories, as well as to help monitoring the growth and the associated painpoints of such repositories. To that end, we are about to integrate this command into `microsoft/git`, to get the tool into the hands of users who need it most, with the idea to iterate in close collaboration between these users and the developers familar with Git's internals. However, we will definitely want to avoid letting anybody have the impression that this command, its exact inner workings, as well as its output format, are anywhere close to stable. To make that fact utterly clear (and thereby protect the freedom to iterate and innovate freely before upstreaming the command), let's mark its output as experimental in all-caps, as the first thing we do. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
The winsock2 library provides functions that work on different data types than file descriptors, therefore we wrap them. But that is not the only difference: they also do not set `errno` but expect the callers to enquire about errors via `WSAGetLastError()`. Let's translate that into appropriate `errno` values whenever the socket operations fail so that Git's code base does not have to change its expectations. This closes #2404 Helped-by: Jeff Hostetler <jeffhost@microsoft.com> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
We map WSAGetLastError() errors to errno errors in winsock_error_to_errno(), but the MSVC strerror() implementation only produces "Unknown error" for most of them. Produce some more meaningful error messages in these cases. Our builds for ARM64 link against the newer UCRT strerror() that does know these errors, so we won't change the strerror() used there. The wording of the messages is copied from glibc strerror() messages. Reported-by: M Hickford <mirth.hickford@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Matthias Aßhauer <mha1993@live.de> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Although NTLM authentication is considered weak (extending even to
NTLMv2, which purportedly allows brute-forcing reasonably complex
8-character passwords in a matter of days, given ample compute
resources), it _is_ one of the authentication methods supported by
libcurl.
Note: The added test case *cannot* reuse the existing `custom_auth`
facility. The reason is that that facility is backed by an NPH script
("No Parse Headers"), which does not allow handling the 3-phase NTLM
authentication correctly (in my hands, the NPH script would not even be
called upon the Type 3 message, a "200 OK" would be returned, but no
headers, let alone the `git http-backend` output as payload). Having a
separate NTLM authentication script makes the exact workings clearer and
more readable, anyway.
Co-authored-by: Matthew John Cheetham <mjcheetham@outlook.com>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
This comment has been true for the longest time; The combination of the two preceding commits made it incorrect, so let's drop that comment. Signed-off-by: Matthias Aßhauer <mha1993@live.de> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
NTLM authentication is relatively weak. This is the case even with the
default setting of modern Windows versions, where NTLMv1 and LanManager
are disabled and only NTLMv2 is enabled: NTLMv2 hashes of even
reasonably complex 8-character passwords can be broken in a matter of
days, given enough compute resources.
Even worse: On Windows, NTLM authentication uses Security Support
Provider Interface ("SSPI"), which provides the credentials without
requiring the user to type them in.
Which means that an attacker could talk an unsuspecting user into
cloning from a server that is under the attacker's control and extracts
the user's NTLMv2 hash without their knowledge.
For that reason, let's disallow NTLM authentication by default.
NTLM authentication is quite simple to set up, though, and therefore
there are still some on-prem Azure DevOps setups out there whose users
and/or automation rely on this type of authentication. To give them an
escape hatch, introduce the `http.<url>.allowNTLMAuth` config setting
that can be set to `true` to opt back into using NTLM for a specific
remote repository.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
All three HTTP retry paths (http_request_recoverable, post_rpc, probe_rpc) call credential_fill() directly when handling HTTP_REAUTH. Extract this into a helper function so that a subsequent commit can add pre-fill logic (such as attempting empty-auth before prompting) in one place. No functional change. Signed-off-by: Matthew John Cheetham <mjcheetham@outlook.com>
These fixes were necessary for Sverre Rabbelier's remote-hg to work, but for some magic reason they are not necessary for the current remote-hg. Makes you wonder how that one gets away with it. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Commit 2406bf5 (Win32: detect unix socket support at runtime, 2024-04-03) introduced a runtime detection for whether the operating system supports unix sockets for Windows, but a mistake snuck into the tests. When building and testing Git without NO_UNIX_SOCKETS we currently skip t0301-credential-cache on Windows if unix sockets are supported and run the tests if they aren't. Flip that logic to actually work the way it was intended. Signed-off-by: Matthias Aßhauer <mha1993@live.de> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
The new default of Git is to disable NTLM authentication by default. To help users find the escape hatch of that config setting, should they need it, suggest it when the authentication failed and the server had offered NTLM, i.e. if re-enabling it would fix the problem. Helped-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
When a server advertises Negotiate (SPNEGO) authentication, the "auto" mode of http.emptyAuth should detect this as an "exotic" method and proactively send empty credentials, allowing libcurl to use the system Kerberos ticket without prompting the user. However, two features interact to prevent this from working: The Negotiate-stripping logic, introduced in 4dbe664 (remote-curl: fall back to Basic auth if Negotiate fails, 2015-01-08), removes CURLAUTH_GSSNEGOTIATE from the allowed methods on the first 401 response. The empty-auth auto-detection, introduced in 40a18fc (http: add an "auto" mode for http.emptyauth, 2017-02-25), then checks the remaining methods for anything "exotic" -- but Negotiate has already been removed, so auto mode never activates for servers whose only non-Basic/Digest method is Negotiate (e.g., Apache with mod_auth_kerb offering Basic + Negotiate). Fix this by delaying the Negotiate stripping in auto mode: on the first 401, keep Negotiate in the allowed methods so that auto mode can detect it and retry with empty credentials. If that attempt fails (no valid Kerberos ticket), strip Negotiate on the second 401 and fall through to credential_fill() as usual. To support this, also teach http_reauth_prepare() to skip credential_fill() when empty auth is about to be attempted, since filling real credentials would bypass the empty-auth mechanism. The true and false modes are unchanged: true sends empty credentials on the very first request (before any 401), and false never sends them. Signed-off-by: Matthew John Cheetham <mjcheetham@outlook.com>
When t5605 tries to verify that files are hardlinked (or that they are not), it uses the `-links` option of the `find` utility. BusyBox' implementation does not support that option, and BusyBox-w32's lstat() does not even report the number of hard links correctly (for performance reasons). So let's just switch to a different method that actually works on Windows. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Update wchar_t buffers to use MAX_LONG_PATH instead of MAX_PATH and call xutftowcs_long_path() in the Win32 backend source files. Signed-off-by: Jeff Hostetler <jeffhost@microsoft.com>
Rather than using private IFTTT Applets that send mails to this maintainer whenever a new version of a Git for Windows component was released, let's use the power of GitHub workflows to make this process publicly visible. This workflow monitors the Atom/RSS feeds, and opens a ticket whenever a new version was released. Note: Bash sometimes releases multiple patched versions within a few minutes of each other (i.e. 5.1p1 through 5.1p4, 5.0p15 and 5.0p16). The MSYS2 runtime also has a similar system. We can address those patches as a group, so we shouldn't get multiple issues about them. Note further: We're not acting on newlib releases, OpenSSL alphas, Perl release candidates or non-stable Perl releases. There's no need to open issues about them. Co-authored-by: Matthias Aßhauer <mha1993@live.de> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Git for Windows uses MSYS2's Bash to run the test suite, which comes with benefits but also at a heavy price: on the plus side, MSYS2's POSIX emulation layer allows us to continue pretending that we are on a Unix system, e.g. use Unix paths instead of Windows ones, yet this is bought at a rather noticeable performance penalty. There *are* some more native ports of Unix shells out there, though, most notably BusyBox-w32's ash. These native ports do not use any POSIX emulation layer (or at most a *very* thin one, choosing to avoid features such as fork() that are expensive to emulate on Windows), and they use native Windows paths (usually with forward slashes instead of backslashes, which is perfectly legal in almost all use cases). And here comes the problem: with a $PWD looking like, say, C:/git-sdk-64/usr/src/git/t/trash directory.t5813-proto-disable-ssh Git's test scripts get quite a bit confused, as their assumptions have been shattered. Not only does this path contain a colon (oh no!), it also does not start with a slash. This is a problem e.g. when constructing a URL as t5813 does it: ssh://remote$PWD. Not only is it impossible to separate the "host" from the path with a $PWD as above, even prefixing $PWD by a slash won't work, as /C:/git-sdk-64/... is not a valid path. As a workaround, detect when $PWD does not start with a slash on Windows, and simply strip the drive prefix, using an obscure feature of Windows paths: if an absolute Windows path starts with a slash, it is implicitly prefixed by the drive prefix of the current directory. As we are talking about the current directory here, anyway, that strategy works. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
On Windows, git repositories may have extra files which need cleaned (e.g., a build directory) that may be arbitrarily deep. Suggest using `core.longPaths` if such situations are encountered. Fixes: #2715 Signed-off-by: Ben Boeckel <mathstuf@gmail.com>
…ITOR" In e3f7e01 (Revert "editor: save and reset terminal after calling EDITOR", 2021-11-22), we reverted the commit wholesale where the terminal state would be saved and restored before/after calling an editor. The reverted commit was intended to fix a problem with Windows Terminal where simply calling `vi` would cause problems afterwards. To fix the problem addressed by the revert, but _still_ keep the problem with Windows Terminal fixed, let's revert the revert, with a twist: we restrict the save/restore _specifically_ to the case where `vi` (or `vim`) is called, and do not do the same for any other editor. This should still catch the majority of the cases, and will bridge the time until the original patch is re-done in a way that addresses all concerns. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
The `--stdin` option was a well-established paradigm in other commands, therefore we implemented it in `git reset` for use by Visual Studio. Unfortunately, upstream Git decided that it is time to introduce `--pathspec-from-file` instead. To keep backwards-compatibility for some grace period, we therefore reinstate the `--stdin` option on top of the `--pathspec-from-file` option, but mark it firmly as deprecated. Helped-by: Victoria Dye <vdye@github.com> Helped-by: Matthew John Cheetham <mjcheetham@outlook.com> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Reintroduce the 'core.useBuiltinFSMonitor' config setting (originally added in 0a756b2 (fsmonitor: config settings are repository-specific, 2021-03-05)) after its removal from the upstream version of FSMonitor. Upstream, the 'core.useBuiltinFSMonitor' setting was rendered obsolete by "overloading" the 'core.fsmonitor' setting to take a boolean value. However, several applications (e.g., 'scalar') utilize the original config setting, so it should be preserved for a deprecation period before complete removal: * if 'core.fsmonitor' is a boolean, the user is correctly using the new config syntax; do not use 'core.useBuiltinFSMonitor'. * if 'core.fsmonitor' is unspecified, use 'core.useBuiltinFSMonitor'. * if 'core.fsmonitor' is a path, override and use the builtin FSMonitor if 'core.useBuiltinFSMonitor' is 'true'; otherwise, use the FSMonitor hook indicated by the path. Additionally, for this deprecation period, advise users to switch to using 'core.fsmonitor' to specify their use of the builtin FSMonitor. Signed-off-by: Victoria Dye <vdye@github.com>
See https://docs.github.com/en/code-security/dependabot/working-with-dependabot/keeping-your-actions-up-to-date-with-dependabot#enabling-dependabot-version-updates-for-actions for details. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
On Windows, the current working directory is pretty much guaranteed to contain a colon. If we feed that path to CVS, it mistakes it for a separator between host and port, though. This has not been a problem so far because Git for Windows uses MSYS2's Bash using a POSIX emulation layer that also pretends that the current directory is a Unix path (at least as long as we're in a shell script). However, that is rather limiting, as Git for Windows also explores other ports of other Unix shells. One of those is BusyBox-w32's ash, which is a native port (i.e. *not* using any POSIX emulation layer, and certainly not emulating Unix paths). So let's just detect if there is a colon in $PWD and punt in that case. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
These are Git for Windows' Git GUI and gitk patches. We will have to decide at some point what to do about them, but that's a little lower priority (as Git GUI seems to be unmaintained for the time being, and the gitk maintainer keeps a very low profile on the Git mailing list, too). Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
A fix for calling `vim` in Windows Terminal caused a regression and was reverted. We partially un-revert this, to get the fix again. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
This topic branch re-adds the deprecated --stdin/-z options to `git reset`. Those patches were overridden by a different set of options in the upstream Git project before we could propose `--stdin`. We offered this in MinGit to applications that wanted a safer way to pass lots of pathspecs to Git, and these applications will need to be adjusted. Instead of `--stdin`, `--pathspec-from-file=-` should be used, and instead of `-z`, `--pathspec-file-nul`. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Originally introduced as `core.useBuiltinFSMonitor` in Git for Windows and developed, improved and stabilized there, the built-in FSMonitor only made it into upstream Git (after unnecessarily long hemming and hawing and throwing overly perfectionist style review sticks into the spokes) as `core.fsmonitor = true`. In Git for Windows, with this topic branch, we re-introduce the now-obsolete config setting, with warnings suggesting to existing users how to switch to the new config setting, with the intention to ultimately drop the patch at some stage. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Start monitoring updates of Git for Windows' component in the open
The Git for Windows project has grown quite complex over the years, certainly much more complex than during the first years where the `msysgit.git` repository was abusing Git for package management purposes and the `git/git` fork was called `4msysgit.git`. Let's describe the status quo in a thorough way. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
In this time and age, AI is everywhere. However, it's sometimes not very easy to use. For green-field projects it works quite a bit better than for existing legacy projects. And Git's source code is _quite_ as legacy code as they come... 😁 Now, the only way how AI can be used efficiently with legacy code is by providing enough information by way of prompt context for the AI to have a chance to make any sense of the code. The structure and the architecture is, after all, not designed for AI, but rather the opposite: By virtue of having grown organically over two decades, there is no design that AI coding models would readily grasp. So here is a document that describes all kinds of aspects about this project. The idea is to help AI by providing information that it does not have ingrained in its weights. The idea is to provide information that a human prompter might take for granted, but no coding model will have been trained on specifically. Assisted-by: Claude Opus 4.5 Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
The Git project followed Git for Windows' lead and added their Code of Conduct, based on the Contributor Covenant v1.4, later updated to v2.0. We adapt it slightly to Git for Windows. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Getting started contributing to Git can be difficult on a Windows machine. CONTRIBUTING.md contains a guide to getting started, including detailed steps for setting up build tools, running tests, and submitting patches to upstream. [includes an example by Pratik Karki how to submit v2, v3, v4, etc.] Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <dstolee@microsoft.com>
Includes touch-ups by 마누엘, Philip Oakley and 孙卓识. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
With improvements by Clive Chan, Adric Norris, Ben Bodenmiller and Philip Oakley. Helped-by: Clive Chan <cc@clive.io> Helped-by: Adric Norris <landstander668@gmail.com> Helped-by: Ben Bodenmiller <bbodenmiller@hotmail.com> Helped-by: Philip Oakley <philipoakley@iee.org> Signed-off-by: Brendan Forster <brendan@github.com> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Git for Windows accepts pull requests; Core Git does not. Therefore we need to adjust the template (because it only matches core Git's project management style, not ours). Also: direct Git for Windows enhancements to their contributions page, space out the text for easy reading, and clarify that the mailing list is plain text, not HTML. Signed-off-by: Philip Oakley <philipoakley@iee.org> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
This is the recommended way on GitHub to describe policies revolving around security issues and about supported versions. Helped-by: Sven Strickroth <email@cs-ware.de> Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Add a README.md for GitHub goodness. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
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This PR reorganizes the branch thicket of Git for Windows a bit; The result is tree-same to the current
mainbranch. The reason to do that now is to ease the rebase onto upstream Git v2.55.0-rc0 later today.