git/t/t7527-builtin-fsmonitor.sh
Junio C Hamano 9c32cfb49c Git 2.38.1
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Sync with v2.38.1
2022-10-17 15:46:09 -07:00

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#!/bin/sh
test_description='built-in file system watcher'
. ./test-lib.sh
if ! test_have_prereq FSMONITOR_DAEMON
then
skip_all="fsmonitor--daemon is not supported on this platform"
test_done
fi
stop_daemon_delete_repo () {
r=$1 &&
test_might_fail git -C $r fsmonitor--daemon stop &&
rm -rf $1
}
start_daemon () {
r= tf= t2= tk= &&
while test "$#" -ne 0
do
case "$1" in
-C)
r="-C ${2?}"
shift
;;
--tf)
tf="${2?}"
shift
;;
--t2)
t2="${2?}"
shift
;;
--tk)
tk="${2?}"
shift
;;
-*)
BUG "error: unknown option: '$1'"
;;
*)
BUG "error: unbound argument: '$1'"
;;
esac
shift
done &&
(
if test -n "$tf"
then
GIT_TRACE_FSMONITOR="$tf"
export GIT_TRACE_FSMONITOR
fi &&
if test -n "$t2"
then
GIT_TRACE2_PERF="$t2"
export GIT_TRACE2_PERF
fi &&
if test -n "$tk"
then
GIT_TEST_FSMONITOR_TOKEN="$tk"
export GIT_TEST_FSMONITOR_TOKEN
fi &&
git $r fsmonitor--daemon start &&
git $r fsmonitor--daemon status
)
}
# Is a Trace2 data event present with the given catetory and key?
# We do not care what the value is.
#
have_t2_data_event () {
c=$1 &&
k=$2 &&
grep -e '"event":"data".*"category":"'"$c"'".*"key":"'"$k"'"'
}
test_expect_success 'explicit daemon start and stop' '
test_when_finished "stop_daemon_delete_repo test_explicit" &&
git init test_explicit &&
start_daemon -C test_explicit &&
git -C test_explicit fsmonitor--daemon stop &&
test_must_fail git -C test_explicit fsmonitor--daemon status
'
test_expect_success 'implicit daemon start' '
test_when_finished "stop_daemon_delete_repo test_implicit" &&
git init test_implicit &&
test_must_fail git -C test_implicit fsmonitor--daemon status &&
# query will implicitly start the daemon.
#
# for test-script simplicity, we send a V1 timestamp rather than
# a V2 token. either way, the daemon response to any query contains
# a new V2 token. (the daemon may complain that we sent a V1 request,
# but this test case is only concerned with whether the daemon was
# implicitly started.)
GIT_TRACE2_EVENT="$PWD/.git/trace" \
test-tool -C test_implicit fsmonitor-client query --token 0 >actual &&
nul_to_q <actual >actual.filtered &&
grep "builtin:" actual.filtered &&
# confirm that a daemon was started in the background.
#
# since the mechanism for starting the background daemon is platform
# dependent, just confirm that the foreground command received a
# response from the daemon.
have_t2_data_event fsm_client query/response-length <.git/trace &&
git -C test_implicit fsmonitor--daemon status &&
git -C test_implicit fsmonitor--daemon stop &&
test_must_fail git -C test_implicit fsmonitor--daemon status
'
# Verify that the daemon has shutdown. Spin a few seconds to
# make the test a little more robust during CI testing.
#
# We're looking for an implicit shutdown, such as when we delete or
# rename the ".git" directory. Our delete/rename will cause a file
# system event that the daemon will see and the daemon will
# auto-shutdown as soon as it sees it. But this is racy with our `git
# fsmonitor--daemon status` commands (and we cannot use a cookie file
# here to help us). So spin a little and give the daemon a chance to
# see the event. (This is primarily for underpowered CI build/test
# machines (where it might take a moment to wake and reschedule the
# daemon process) to avoid false alarms during test runs.)
#
IMPLICIT_TIMEOUT=5
verify_implicit_shutdown () {
r=$1 &&
k=0 &&
while test "$k" -lt $IMPLICIT_TIMEOUT
do
git -C $r fsmonitor--daemon status || return 0
sleep 1
k=$(( $k + 1 ))
done &&
return 1
}
test_expect_success 'implicit daemon stop (delete .git)' '
test_when_finished "stop_daemon_delete_repo test_implicit_1" &&
git init test_implicit_1 &&
start_daemon -C test_implicit_1 &&
# deleting the .git directory will implicitly stop the daemon.
rm -rf test_implicit_1/.git &&
# [1] Create an empty .git directory so that the following Git
# command will stay relative to the `-C` directory.
#
# Without this, the Git command will override the requested
# -C argument and crawl out to the containing Git source tree.
# This would make the test result dependent upon whether we
# were using fsmonitor on our development worktree.
#
mkdir test_implicit_1/.git &&
verify_implicit_shutdown test_implicit_1
'
test_expect_success 'implicit daemon stop (rename .git)' '
test_when_finished "stop_daemon_delete_repo test_implicit_2" &&
git init test_implicit_2 &&
start_daemon -C test_implicit_2 &&
# renaming the .git directory will implicitly stop the daemon.
mv test_implicit_2/.git test_implicit_2/.xxx &&
# See [1] above.
#
mkdir test_implicit_2/.git &&
verify_implicit_shutdown test_implicit_2
'
# File systems on Windows may or may not have shortnames.
# This is a volume-specific setting on modern systems.
# "C:/" drives are required to have them enabled. Other
# hard drives default to disabled.
#
# This is a crude test to see if shortnames are enabled
# on the volume containing the test directory. It is
# crude, but it does not require elevation like `fsutil`.
#
test_lazy_prereq SHORTNAMES '
mkdir .foo &&
test -d "FOO~1"
'
# Here we assume that the shortname of ".git" is "GIT~1".
test_expect_success MINGW,SHORTNAMES 'implicit daemon stop (rename GIT~1)' '
test_when_finished "stop_daemon_delete_repo test_implicit_1s" &&
git init test_implicit_1s &&
start_daemon -C test_implicit_1s &&
# renaming the .git directory will implicitly stop the daemon.
# this moves {.git, GIT~1} to {.gitxyz, GITXYZ~1}.
# the rename-from FS Event will contain the shortname.
#
mv test_implicit_1s/GIT~1 test_implicit_1s/.gitxyz &&
# See [1] above.
# this moves {.gitxyz, GITXYZ~1} to {.git, GIT~1}.
mv test_implicit_1s/.gitxyz test_implicit_1s/.git &&
verify_implicit_shutdown test_implicit_1s
'
# Here we first create a file with LONGNAME of "GIT~1" before
# we create the repo. This will cause the shortname of ".git"
# to be "GIT~2".
test_expect_success MINGW,SHORTNAMES 'implicit daemon stop (rename GIT~2)' '
test_when_finished "stop_daemon_delete_repo test_implicit_1s2" &&
mkdir test_implicit_1s2 &&
echo HELLO >test_implicit_1s2/GIT~1 &&
git init test_implicit_1s2 &&
test_path_is_file test_implicit_1s2/GIT~1 &&
test_path_is_dir test_implicit_1s2/GIT~2 &&
start_daemon -C test_implicit_1s2 &&
# renaming the .git directory will implicitly stop the daemon.
# the rename-from FS Event will contain the shortname.
#
mv test_implicit_1s2/GIT~2 test_implicit_1s2/.gitxyz &&
# See [1] above.
mv test_implicit_1s2/.gitxyz test_implicit_1s2/.git &&
verify_implicit_shutdown test_implicit_1s2
'
test_expect_success 'cannot start multiple daemons' '
test_when_finished "stop_daemon_delete_repo test_multiple" &&
git init test_multiple &&
start_daemon -C test_multiple &&
test_must_fail git -C test_multiple fsmonitor--daemon start 2>actual &&
grep "fsmonitor--daemon is already running" actual &&
git -C test_multiple fsmonitor--daemon stop &&
test_must_fail git -C test_multiple fsmonitor--daemon status
'
# These tests use the main repo in the trash directory
test_expect_success 'setup' '
>tracked &&
>modified &&
>delete &&
>rename &&
mkdir dir1 &&
>dir1/tracked &&
>dir1/modified &&
>dir1/delete &&
>dir1/rename &&
mkdir dir2 &&
>dir2/tracked &&
>dir2/modified &&
>dir2/delete &&
>dir2/rename &&
mkdir dirtorename &&
>dirtorename/a &&
>dirtorename/b &&
cat >.gitignore <<-\EOF &&
.gitignore
expect*
actual*
flush*
trace*
EOF
mkdir -p T1/T2/T3/T4 &&
echo 1 >T1/F1 &&
echo 1 >T1/T2/F1 &&
echo 1 >T1/T2/T3/F1 &&
echo 1 >T1/T2/T3/T4/F1 &&
echo 2 >T1/F2 &&
echo 2 >T1/T2/F2 &&
echo 2 >T1/T2/T3/F2 &&
echo 2 >T1/T2/T3/T4/F2 &&
git -c core.fsmonitor=false add . &&
test_tick &&
git -c core.fsmonitor=false commit -m initial &&
git config core.fsmonitor true
'
# The test already explicitly stopped (or tried to stop) the daemon.
# This is here in case something else fails first.
#
redundant_stop_daemon () {
test_might_fail git fsmonitor--daemon stop
}
test_expect_success 'update-index implicitly starts daemon' '
test_when_finished redundant_stop_daemon &&
test_must_fail git fsmonitor--daemon status &&
GIT_TRACE2_EVENT="$PWD/.git/trace_implicit_1" \
git update-index --fsmonitor &&
git fsmonitor--daemon status &&
test_might_fail git fsmonitor--daemon stop &&
# Confirm that the trace2 log contains a record of the
# daemon starting.
test_subcommand git fsmonitor--daemon start <.git/trace_implicit_1
'
test_expect_success 'status implicitly starts daemon' '
test_when_finished redundant_stop_daemon &&
test_must_fail git fsmonitor--daemon status &&
GIT_TRACE2_EVENT="$PWD/.git/trace_implicit_2" \
git status >actual &&
git fsmonitor--daemon status &&
test_might_fail git fsmonitor--daemon stop &&
# Confirm that the trace2 log contains a record of the
# daemon starting.
test_subcommand git fsmonitor--daemon start <.git/trace_implicit_2
'
edit_files () {
echo 1 >modified &&
echo 2 >dir1/modified &&
echo 3 >dir2/modified &&
>dir1/untracked
}
delete_files () {
rm -f delete &&
rm -f dir1/delete &&
rm -f dir2/delete
}
create_files () {
echo 1 >new &&
echo 2 >dir1/new &&
echo 3 >dir2/new
}
rename_files () {
mv rename renamed &&
mv dir1/rename dir1/renamed &&
mv dir2/rename dir2/renamed
}
file_to_directory () {
rm -f delete &&
mkdir delete &&
echo 1 >delete/new
}
directory_to_file () {
rm -rf dir1 &&
echo 1 >dir1
}
move_directory_contents_deeper() {
mkdir T1/_new_ &&
mv T1/[A-Z]* T1/_new_
}
move_directory_up() {
mv T1/T2/T3 T1
}
move_directory() {
mv T1/T2/T3 T1/T2/NewT3
}
# The next few test cases confirm that our fsmonitor daemon sees each type
# of OS filesystem notification that we care about. At this layer we just
# ensure we are getting the OS notifications and do not try to confirm what
# is reported by `git status`.
#
# We run a simple query after modifying the filesystem just to introduce
# a bit of a delay so that the trace logging from the daemon has time to
# get flushed to disk.
#
# We `reset` and `clean` at the bottom of each test (and before stopping the
# daemon) because these commands might implicitly restart the daemon.
clean_up_repo_and_stop_daemon () {
git reset --hard HEAD &&
git clean -fd &&
test_might_fail git fsmonitor--daemon stop &&
rm -f .git/trace
}
test_expect_success 'edit some files' '
test_when_finished clean_up_repo_and_stop_daemon &&
start_daemon --tf "$PWD/.git/trace" &&
edit_files &&
test-tool fsmonitor-client query --token 0 &&
grep "^event: dir1/modified$" .git/trace &&
grep "^event: dir2/modified$" .git/trace &&
grep "^event: modified$" .git/trace &&
grep "^event: dir1/untracked$" .git/trace
'
test_expect_success 'create some files' '
test_when_finished clean_up_repo_and_stop_daemon &&
start_daemon --tf "$PWD/.git/trace" &&
create_files &&
test-tool fsmonitor-client query --token 0 &&
grep "^event: dir1/new$" .git/trace &&
grep "^event: dir2/new$" .git/trace &&
grep "^event: new$" .git/trace
'
test_expect_success 'delete some files' '
test_when_finished clean_up_repo_and_stop_daemon &&
start_daemon --tf "$PWD/.git/trace" &&
delete_files &&
test-tool fsmonitor-client query --token 0 &&
grep "^event: dir1/delete$" .git/trace &&
grep "^event: dir2/delete$" .git/trace &&
grep "^event: delete$" .git/trace
'
test_expect_success 'rename some files' '
test_when_finished clean_up_repo_and_stop_daemon &&
start_daemon --tf "$PWD/.git/trace" &&
rename_files &&
test-tool fsmonitor-client query --token 0 &&
grep "^event: dir1/rename$" .git/trace &&
grep "^event: dir2/rename$" .git/trace &&
grep "^event: rename$" .git/trace &&
grep "^event: dir1/renamed$" .git/trace &&
grep "^event: dir2/renamed$" .git/trace &&
grep "^event: renamed$" .git/trace
'
test_expect_success 'rename directory' '
test_when_finished clean_up_repo_and_stop_daemon &&
start_daemon --tf "$PWD/.git/trace" &&
mv dirtorename dirrenamed &&
test-tool fsmonitor-client query --token 0 &&
grep "^event: dirtorename/*$" .git/trace &&
grep "^event: dirrenamed/*$" .git/trace
'
test_expect_success 'file changes to directory' '
test_when_finished clean_up_repo_and_stop_daemon &&
start_daemon --tf "$PWD/.git/trace" &&
file_to_directory &&
test-tool fsmonitor-client query --token 0 &&
grep "^event: delete$" .git/trace &&
grep "^event: delete/new$" .git/trace
'
test_expect_success 'directory changes to a file' '
test_when_finished clean_up_repo_and_stop_daemon &&
start_daemon --tf "$PWD/.git/trace" &&
directory_to_file &&
test-tool fsmonitor-client query --token 0 &&
grep "^event: dir1$" .git/trace
'
# The next few test cases exercise the token-resync code. When filesystem
# drops events (because of filesystem velocity or because the daemon isn't
# polling fast enough), we need to discard the cached data (relative to the
# current token) and start collecting events under a new token.
#
# the 'test-tool fsmonitor-client flush' command can be used to send a
# "flush" message to a running daemon and ask it to do a flush/resync.
test_expect_success 'flush cached data' '
test_when_finished "stop_daemon_delete_repo test_flush" &&
git init test_flush &&
start_daemon -C test_flush --tf "$PWD/.git/trace_daemon" --tk true &&
# The daemon should have an initial token with no events in _0 and
# then a few (probably platform-specific number of) events in _1.
# These should both have the same <token_id>.
test-tool -C test_flush fsmonitor-client query --token "builtin:test_00000001:0" >actual_0 &&
nul_to_q <actual_0 >actual_q0 &&
>test_flush/file_1 &&
>test_flush/file_2 &&
test-tool -C test_flush fsmonitor-client query --token "builtin:test_00000001:0" >actual_1 &&
nul_to_q <actual_1 >actual_q1 &&
grep "file_1" actual_q1 &&
# Force a flush. This will change the <token_id>, reset the <seq_nr>, and
# flush the file data. Then create some events and ensure that the file
# again appears in the cache. It should have the new <token_id>.
test-tool -C test_flush fsmonitor-client flush >flush_0 &&
nul_to_q <flush_0 >flush_q0 &&
grep "^builtin:test_00000002:0Q/Q$" flush_q0 &&
test-tool -C test_flush fsmonitor-client query --token "builtin:test_00000002:0" >actual_2 &&
nul_to_q <actual_2 >actual_q2 &&
grep "^builtin:test_00000002:0Q$" actual_q2 &&
>test_flush/file_3 &&
test-tool -C test_flush fsmonitor-client query --token "builtin:test_00000002:0" >actual_3 &&
nul_to_q <actual_3 >actual_q3 &&
grep "file_3" actual_q3
'
# The next few test cases create repos where the .git directory is NOT
# inside the one of the working directory. That is, where .git is a file
# that points to a directory elsewhere. This happens for submodules and
# non-primary worktrees.
test_expect_success 'setup worktree base' '
git init wt-base &&
echo 1 >wt-base/file1 &&
git -C wt-base add file1 &&
git -C wt-base commit -m "c1"
'
test_expect_success 'worktree with .git file' '
git -C wt-base worktree add ../wt-secondary &&
start_daemon -C wt-secondary \
--tf "$PWD/trace_wt_secondary" \
--t2 "$PWD/trace2_wt_secondary" &&
git -C wt-secondary fsmonitor--daemon stop &&
test_must_fail git -C wt-secondary fsmonitor--daemon status
'
# NEEDSWORK: Repeat one of the "edit" tests on wt-secondary and
# confirm that we get the same events and behavior -- that is, that
# fsmonitor--daemon correctly watches BOTH the working directory and
# the external GITDIR directory and behaves the same as when ".git"
# is a directory inside the working directory.
test_expect_success 'cleanup worktrees' '
stop_daemon_delete_repo wt-secondary &&
stop_daemon_delete_repo wt-base
'
# The next few tests perform arbitrary/contrived file operations and
# confirm that status is correct. That is, that the data (or lack of
# data) from fsmonitor doesn't cause incorrect results. And doesn't
# cause incorrect results when the untracked-cache is enabled.
test_lazy_prereq UNTRACKED_CACHE '
git update-index --test-untracked-cache
'
test_expect_success 'Matrix: setup for untracked-cache,fsmonitor matrix' '
test_unconfig core.fsmonitor &&
git update-index --no-fsmonitor &&
test_might_fail git fsmonitor--daemon stop
'
matrix_clean_up_repo () {
git reset --hard HEAD &&
git clean -fd
}
matrix_try () {
uc=$1 &&
fsm=$2 &&
fn=$3 &&
if test $uc = true && test $fsm = false
then
# The untracked-cache is buggy when FSMonitor is
# DISABLED, so skip the tests for this matrix
# combination.
#
# We've observed random, occasional test failures on
# Windows and MacOS when the UC is turned on and FSM
# is turned off. These are rare, but they do happen
# indicating that it is probably a race condition within
# the untracked cache itself.
#
# It usually happens when a test does F/D trickery and
# then the NEXT test fails because of extra status
# output from stale UC data from the previous test.
#
# Since FSMonitor is not involved in the error, skip
# the tests for this matrix combination.
#
return 0
fi &&
test_expect_success "Matrix[uc:$uc][fsm:$fsm] $fn" '
matrix_clean_up_repo &&
$fn &&
if test $uc = false && test $fsm = false
then
git status --porcelain=v1 >.git/expect.$fn
else
git status --porcelain=v1 >.git/actual.$fn &&
test_cmp .git/expect.$fn .git/actual.$fn
fi
'
}
uc_values="false"
test_have_prereq UNTRACKED_CACHE && uc_values="false true"
for uc_val in $uc_values
do
if test $uc_val = false
then
test_expect_success "Matrix[uc:$uc_val] disable untracked cache" '
git config core.untrackedcache false &&
git update-index --no-untracked-cache
'
else
test_expect_success "Matrix[uc:$uc_val] enable untracked cache" '
git config core.untrackedcache true &&
git update-index --untracked-cache
'
fi
fsm_values="false true"
for fsm_val in $fsm_values
do
if test $fsm_val = false
then
test_expect_success "Matrix[uc:$uc_val][fsm:$fsm_val] disable fsmonitor" '
test_unconfig core.fsmonitor &&
git update-index --no-fsmonitor &&
test_might_fail git fsmonitor--daemon stop
'
else
test_expect_success "Matrix[uc:$uc_val][fsm:$fsm_val] enable fsmonitor" '
git config core.fsmonitor true &&
git fsmonitor--daemon start &&
git update-index --fsmonitor
'
fi
matrix_try $uc_val $fsm_val edit_files
matrix_try $uc_val $fsm_val delete_files
matrix_try $uc_val $fsm_val create_files
matrix_try $uc_val $fsm_val rename_files
matrix_try $uc_val $fsm_val file_to_directory
matrix_try $uc_val $fsm_val directory_to_file
matrix_try $uc_val $fsm_val move_directory_contents_deeper
matrix_try $uc_val $fsm_val move_directory_up
matrix_try $uc_val $fsm_val move_directory
if test $fsm_val = true
then
test_expect_success "Matrix[uc:$uc_val][fsm:$fsm_val] disable fsmonitor at end" '
test_unconfig core.fsmonitor &&
git update-index --no-fsmonitor &&
test_might_fail git fsmonitor--daemon stop
'
fi
done
done
# Test Unicode UTF-8 characters in the pathname of the working
# directory root. Use of "*A()" routines rather than "*W()" routines
# on Windows can sometimes lead to odd failures.
#
u1=$(printf "u_c3_a6__\xC3\xA6")
u2=$(printf "u_e2_99_ab__\xE2\x99\xAB")
u_values="$u1 $u2"
for u in $u_values
do
test_expect_success "unicode in repo root path: $u" '
test_when_finished "stop_daemon_delete_repo $u" &&
git init "$u" &&
echo 1 >"$u"/file1 &&
git -C "$u" add file1 &&
git -C "$u" config core.fsmonitor true &&
start_daemon -C "$u" &&
git -C "$u" status >actual &&
grep "new file: file1" actual
'
done
# Test fsmonitor interaction with submodules.
#
# If we start the daemon in the super, it will see FS events for
# everything in the working directory cone and this includes any
# files/directories contained *within* the submodules.
#
# A `git status` at top level will get events for items within the
# submodule and ignore them, since they aren't named in the index
# of the super repo. This makes the fsmonitor response a little
# noisy, but it doesn't alter the correctness of the state of the
# super-proper.
#
# When we have submodules, `git status` normally does a recursive
# status on each of the submodules and adds a summary row for any
# dirty submodules. (See the "S..." bits in porcelain V2 output.)
#
# It is therefore important that the top level status not be tricked
# by the FSMonitor response to skip those recursive calls. That is,
# even if FSMonitor says that the mtime of the submodule directory
# hasn't changed and it could be implicitly marked valid, we must
# not take that shortcut. We need to force the recusion into the
# submodule so that we get a summary of the status *within* the
# submodule.
create_super () {
super="$1" &&
git init "$super" &&
echo x >"$super/file_1" &&
echo y >"$super/file_2" &&
echo z >"$super/file_3" &&
mkdir "$super/dir_1" &&
echo a >"$super/dir_1/file_11" &&
echo b >"$super/dir_1/file_12" &&
mkdir "$super/dir_1/dir_2" &&
echo a >"$super/dir_1/dir_2/file_21" &&
echo b >"$super/dir_1/dir_2/file_22" &&
git -C "$super" add . &&
git -C "$super" commit -m "initial $super commit"
}
create_sub () {
sub="$1" &&
git init "$sub" &&
echo x >"$sub/file_x" &&
echo y >"$sub/file_y" &&
echo z >"$sub/file_z" &&
mkdir "$sub/dir_x" &&
echo a >"$sub/dir_x/file_a" &&
echo b >"$sub/dir_x/file_b" &&
mkdir "$sub/dir_x/dir_y" &&
echo a >"$sub/dir_x/dir_y/file_a" &&
echo b >"$sub/dir_x/dir_y/file_b" &&
git -C "$sub" add . &&
git -C "$sub" commit -m "initial $sub commit"
}
my_match_and_clean () {
git -C super --no-optional-locks status --porcelain=v2 >actual.with &&
git -C super --no-optional-locks -c core.fsmonitor=false \
status --porcelain=v2 >actual.without &&
test_cmp actual.with actual.without &&
git -C super/dir_1/dir_2/sub reset --hard &&
git -C super/dir_1/dir_2/sub clean -d -f
}
test_expect_success 'submodule setup' '
git config --global protocol.file.allow always
'
test_expect_success 'submodule always visited' '
test_when_finished "git -C super fsmonitor--daemon stop; \
rm -rf super; \
rm -rf sub" &&
create_super super &&
create_sub sub &&
git -C super submodule add ../sub ./dir_1/dir_2/sub &&
git -C super commit -m "add sub" &&
start_daemon -C super &&
git -C super config core.fsmonitor true &&
git -C super update-index --fsmonitor &&
git -C super status &&
# Now run pairs of commands w/ and w/o FSMonitor while we make
# some dirt in the submodule and confirm matching output.
# Completely clean status.
my_match_and_clean &&
# .M S..U
echo z >super/dir_1/dir_2/sub/dir_x/dir_y/foobar_u &&
my_match_and_clean &&
# .M S.M.
echo z >super/dir_1/dir_2/sub/dir_x/dir_y/foobar_m &&
git -C super/dir_1/dir_2/sub add . &&
my_match_and_clean &&
# .M S.M.
echo z >>super/dir_1/dir_2/sub/dir_x/dir_y/file_a &&
git -C super/dir_1/dir_2/sub add . &&
my_match_and_clean &&
# .M SC..
echo z >>super/dir_1/dir_2/sub/dir_x/dir_y/file_a &&
git -C super/dir_1/dir_2/sub add . &&
git -C super/dir_1/dir_2/sub commit -m "SC.." &&
my_match_and_clean
'
# If a submodule has a `sub/.git/` directory (rather than a file
# pointing to the super's `.git/modules/sub`) and `core.fsmonitor`
# turned on in the submodule and the daemon is not yet started in
# the submodule, and someone does a `git submodule absorbgitdirs`
# in the super, Git will recursively invoke `git submodule--helper`
# to do the work and this may try to read the index. This will
# try to start the daemon in the submodule *and* pass (either
# directly or via inheritance) the `--super-prefix` arg to the
# `git fsmonitor--daemon start` command inside the submodule.
# This causes a warning because fsmonitor--daemon does take that
# global arg (see the table in git.c)
#
# This causes a warning when trying to start the daemon that is
# somewhat confusing. It does not seem to hurt anything because
# the fsmonitor code maps the query failure into a trivial response
# and does the work anyway.
#
# It would be nice to silence the warning, however.
have_t2_error_event () {
log=$1
msg="fsmonitor--daemon doesnQt support --super-prefix" &&
tr '\047' Q <$1 | grep -e "$msg"
}
test_expect_success "stray submodule super-prefix warning" '
test_when_finished "rm -rf super; \
rm -rf sub; \
rm super-sub.trace" &&
create_super super &&
create_sub sub &&
# Copy rather than submodule add so that we get a .git dir.
cp -R ./sub ./super/dir_1/dir_2/sub &&
git -C super/dir_1/dir_2/sub config core.fsmonitor true &&
git -C super submodule add ../sub ./dir_1/dir_2/sub &&
git -C super commit -m "add sub" &&
test_path_is_dir super/dir_1/dir_2/sub/.git &&
GIT_TRACE2_EVENT="$PWD/super-sub.trace" \
git -C super submodule absorbgitdirs &&
! have_t2_error_event super-sub.trace
'
# On a case-insensitive file system, confirm that the daemon
# notices when the .git directory is moved/renamed/deleted
# regardless of how it is spelled in the the FS event.
# That is, does the FS event receive the spelling of the
# operation or does it receive the spelling preserved with
# the file/directory.
#
test_expect_success CASE_INSENSITIVE_FS 'case insensitive+preserving' '
# test_when_finished "stop_daemon_delete_repo test_insensitive" &&
git init test_insensitive &&
start_daemon -C test_insensitive --tf "$PWD/insensitive.trace" &&
mkdir -p test_insensitive/abc/def &&
echo xyz >test_insensitive/ABC/DEF/xyz &&
test_path_is_dir test_insensitive/.git &&
test_path_is_dir test_insensitive/.GIT &&
# Rename .git using an alternate spelling to verify that that
# daemon detects it and automatically shuts down.
mv test_insensitive/.GIT test_insensitive/.FOO &&
# See [1] above.
mv test_insensitive/.FOO test_insensitive/.git &&
verify_implicit_shutdown test_insensitive &&
# Verify that events were reported using on-disk spellings of the
# directories and files that we touched. We may or may not get a
# trailing slash on modified directories.
#
grep -E "^event: abc/?$" ./insensitive.trace &&
grep -E "^event: abc/def/?$" ./insensitive.trace &&
grep -E "^event: abc/def/xyz$" ./insensitive.trace
'
# The variable "unicode_debug" is defined in the following library
# script to dump information about how the (OS, FS) handles Unicode
# composition. Uncomment the following line if you want to enable it.
#
# unicode_debug=true
. "$TEST_DIRECTORY/lib-unicode-nfc-nfd.sh"
# See if the OS or filesystem does NFC/NFD aliasing/munging.
#
# The daemon should err on the side of caution and send BOTH the
# NFC and NFD forms. It does not know the original spelling of
# the pathname (how the user thinks it should be spelled), so
# emit both and let the client decide (when necessary). This is
# similar to "core.precomposeUnicode".
#
test_expect_success !UNICODE_COMPOSITION_SENSITIVE 'Unicode nfc/nfd' '
test_when_finished "stop_daemon_delete_repo test_unicode" &&
git init test_unicode &&
start_daemon -C test_unicode --tf "$PWD/unicode.trace" &&
# Create a directory using an NFC spelling.
#
mkdir test_unicode/nfc &&
mkdir test_unicode/nfc/c_${utf8_nfc} &&
# Create a directory using an NFD spelling.
#
mkdir test_unicode/nfd &&
mkdir test_unicode/nfd/d_${utf8_nfd} &&
git -C test_unicode fsmonitor--daemon stop &&
if test_have_prereq UNICODE_NFC_PRESERVED
then
# We should have seen NFC event from OS.
# We should not have synthesized an NFD event.
grep -E "^event: nfc/c_${utf8_nfc}/?$" ./unicode.trace &&
grep -E -v "^event: nfc/c_${utf8_nfd}/?$" ./unicode.trace
else
# We should have seen NFD event from OS.
# We should have synthesized an NFC event.
grep -E "^event: nfc/c_${utf8_nfd}/?$" ./unicode.trace &&
grep -E "^event: nfc/c_${utf8_nfc}/?$" ./unicode.trace
fi &&
# We assume UNICODE_NFD_PRESERVED.
# We should have seen explicit NFD from OS.
# We should have synthesized an NFC event.
grep -E "^event: nfd/d_${utf8_nfd}/?$" ./unicode.trace &&
grep -E "^event: nfd/d_${utf8_nfc}/?$" ./unicode.trace
'
test_done