* Deprecate "gopid" in log, it is not useful and requires very hacky
approach
* Remove "git.Command.SetDescription" because it is not useful and only
makes the logs too flexible
Resolve#31492
The response time for the Pull Requests API has improved significantly,
dropping from over `2000ms` to about `350ms` on my local machine. It's
about `6` times faster.
A key area for further optimization lies in batch-fetching data for
`apiPullRequest.ChangedFiles, apiPullRequest.Additions, and
apiPullRequest.Deletions`.
Tests `TestAPIViewPulls` does exist and new tests added.
- This PR also fixes some bugs in `GetDiff` functions.
- This PR also fixes data inconsistent in test data. For a pull request,
the head branch's reference should be equal to the reference in
`pull/xxx/head`.
In profiling integration tests, I found a couple places where per-test
overhead could be reduced:
* Avoiding disk IO by synchronizing instead of deleting & copying test
Git repository data. This saves ~100ms per test on my machine
* When flushing queues in `PrintCurrentTest`, invoke `FlushWithContext`
in a parallel.
---------
Co-authored-by: wxiaoguang <wxiaoguang@gmail.com>
Gitea instance keeps reporting a lot of errors like "LFS SSH transfer connection denied, pure SSH protocol is disabled". When starting debugging the problem, there are more problems found. Try to address most of them:
* avoid unnecessary server side error logs (change `fail()` to not log them)
* figure out the broken tests/user2/lfs.git (added comments)
* avoid `migratePushMirrors` failure when a repository doesn't exist (ignore them)
* avoid "Authorization" (internal&lfs) header conflicts, remove the tricky "swapAuth" and use "X-Gitea-Internal-Auth"
* make internal token comparing constant time (it wasn't a serous problem because in a real world it's nearly impossible to timing-attack the token, but good to fix and backport)
* avoid duplicate routers (introduce AddOwnerRepoGitLFSRoutes)
* avoid "internal (private)" routes using session/web context (they should use private context)
* fix incorrect "path" usages (use "filepath")
* fix incorrect mocked route point handling (need to check func nil correctly)
* split some tests from "git general tests" to "git misc tests" (to keep "git_general_test.go" simple)
Still no correct result for Git LFS SSH tests. So the code is kept there
(`tests/integration/git_lfs_ssh_test.go`) and a FIXME explains the details.
When opening a repository, it will call `ensureValidRepository` and also
`CatFileBatch`. But sometimes these will not be used until repository
closed. So it's a waste of CPU to invoke 3 times git command for every
open repository.
This PR removed all of these from `OpenRepository` but only kept
checking whether the folder exists. When a batch is necessary, the
necessary functions will be invoked.
Fix#31271.
When gogit is enabled, `IsObjectExist` calls
`repo.gogitRepo.ResolveRevision`, which is not correct. It's for
checking references not objects, it could work with commit hash since
it's both a valid reference and a commit object, but it doesn't work
with blob objects.
So it causes #31271 because it reports that all blob objects do not
exist.
Found at
https://github.com/go-gitea/gitea/pull/31790#issuecomment-2272898915
`unit-tests-gogit` never work since the workflow set `TAGS` with
`gogit`, but the Makefile use `TEST_TAGS`.
This PR adds the values of `TAGS` to `TEST_TAGS`, ensuring that setting
`TAGS` is always acceptable and avoiding confusion about which one
should be set.
Fix#31738
When pushing a new branch, the old commit is zero. Most git commands
cannot recognize the zero commit id. To get the changed files in the
push, we need to get the first diverge commit of this branch. In most
situations, we could check commits one by one until one commit is
contained by another branch. Then we will think that commit is the
diverge point.
And in a pre-receive hook, this will be more difficult because all
commits haven't been merged and they actually stored in a temporary
place by git. So we need to bring some envs to let git know the commit
exist.
Running git update-index for every individual file is slow, so add and
remove everything with a single git command.
When such a big commit lands in the default branch, it could cause PR
creation and patch checking for all open PRs to be slow, or time out
entirely. For example, a commit that removes 1383 files was measured to
take more than 60 seconds and timed out. With this change checking took
about a second.
This is related to #27967, though this will not help with commits that
change many lines in few files.
Remove "EncodeSha1", it shouldn't be used as a general purpose hasher
(just like we have removed "EncodeMD5" in #28622)
Rewrite the "time-limited code" related code and write better tests, the
old code doesn't seem quite right.
Misspell 0.5.0 supports passing a csv file to extend the list of
misspellings, so I added some common ones from the codebase. There is at
least one typo in a API response so we need to decided whether to revert
that and then likely remove the dict entry.
Great thanks to @oliverpool for figuring out the problem and proposing a
fix.
Regression of #28138
Incorrect hash causes the user's LFS files get all deleted when running
`doctor fix all`
(by the way, remove unused/non-standard comments)
Co-authored-by: Giteabot <teabot@gitea.io>
Noteable additions:
- `redefines-builtin-id` forbid variable names that shadow go builtins
- `empty-lines` remove unnecessary empty lines that `gofumpt` does not
remove for some reason
- `superfluous-else` eliminate more superfluous `else` branches
Rules are also sorted alphabetically and I cleaned up various parts of
`.golangci.yml`.
To make it more flexible and support SSH signature.
The existing tests are not changed, there are also tests covering
`parseTagRef` which also calls `parsePayloadSignature` now. Add some new
tests to `Test_parseTagData`
Most time, when invoking `git.OpenRepository`, `objectFormat` will not
be used, so it's a waste to invoke commandline to get the object format.
This PR make it a lazy operation, only invoke that when necessary.
Close#29509
Windows, unlike Linux, does not have signal-specified exit codes.
Therefore, we should add a Windows-specific check for Windows. If we
don't do this, the logs will always show a failed status, even though
the command actually works correctly.
If you check the Go source code in exec_windows.go, you will see that it
always returns exit code 1.
![image](https://github.com/go-gitea/gitea/assets/30816317/9dfd7c70-9995-47d9-9641-db793f58770c)
The exit code 1 does not exclusively signify a SIGNAL KILL; it can
indicate any issue that occurs when a program fails.