Commit 49057019 authored by jingbo.wang's avatar jingbo.wang

删除不知道什么鬼的缓存文件

parent 9c377c78
aebefd9fcb99f22cd691ef778a12ed68f0e6a1ab tag 'v1.3.4' of https://github.com/DataDog/zstd
[core]
repositoryformatversion = 0
filemode = true
bare = true
ignorecase = true
precomposeunicode = true
[remote "origin"]
url = https://github.com/DataDog/zstd
fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/*
Unnamed repository; edit this file 'description' to name the repository.
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to check the commit log message taken by
# applypatch from an e-mail message.
#
# The hook should exit with non-zero status after issuing an
# appropriate message if it wants to stop the commit. The hook is
# allowed to edit the commit message file.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "applypatch-msg".
. git-sh-setup
commitmsg="$(git rev-parse --git-path hooks/commit-msg)"
test -x "$commitmsg" && exec "$commitmsg" ${1+"$@"}
:
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to check the commit log message.
# Called by "git commit" with one argument, the name of the file
# that has the commit message. The hook should exit with non-zero
# status after issuing an appropriate message if it wants to stop the
# commit. The hook is allowed to edit the commit message file.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "commit-msg".
# Uncomment the below to add a Signed-off-by line to the message.
# Doing this in a hook is a bad idea in general, but the prepare-commit-msg
# hook is more suited to it.
#
# SOB=$(git var GIT_AUTHOR_IDENT | sed -n 's/^\(.*>\).*$/Signed-off-by: \1/p')
# grep -qs "^$SOB" "$1" || echo "$SOB" >> "$1"
# This example catches duplicate Signed-off-by lines.
test "" = "$(grep '^Signed-off-by: ' "$1" |
sort | uniq -c | sed -e '/^[ ]*1[ ]/d')" || {
echo >&2 Duplicate Signed-off-by lines.
exit 1
}
#!/usr/bin/perl
use strict;
use warnings;
use IPC::Open2;
# An example hook script to integrate Watchman
# (https://facebook.github.io/watchman/) with git to speed up detecting
# new and modified files.
#
# The hook is passed a version (currently 1) and a time in nanoseconds
# formatted as a string and outputs to stdout all files that have been
# modified since the given time. Paths must be relative to the root of
# the working tree and separated by a single NUL.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "query-watchman" and set
# 'git config core.fsmonitor .git/hooks/query-watchman'
#
my ($version, $time) = @ARGV;
# Check the hook interface version
if ($version == 1) {
# convert nanoseconds to seconds
$time = int $time / 1000000000;
} else {
die "Unsupported query-fsmonitor hook version '$version'.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n";
}
my $git_work_tree;
if ($^O =~ 'msys' || $^O =~ 'cygwin') {
$git_work_tree = Win32::GetCwd();
$git_work_tree =~ tr/\\/\//;
} else {
require Cwd;
$git_work_tree = Cwd::cwd();
}
my $retry = 1;
launch_watchman();
sub launch_watchman {
my $pid = open2(\*CHLD_OUT, \*CHLD_IN, 'watchman -j --no-pretty')
or die "open2() failed: $!\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n";
# In the query expression below we're asking for names of files that
# changed since $time but were not transient (ie created after
# $time but no longer exist).
#
# To accomplish this, we're using the "since" generator to use the
# recency index to select candidate nodes and "fields" to limit the
# output to file names only. Then we're using the "expression" term to
# further constrain the results.
#
# The category of transient files that we want to ignore will have a
# creation clock (cclock) newer than $time_t value and will also not
# currently exist.
my $query = <<" END";
["query", "$git_work_tree", {
"since": $time,
"fields": ["name"],
"expression": ["not", ["allof", ["since", $time, "cclock"], ["not", "exists"]]]
}]
END
print CHLD_IN $query;
close CHLD_IN;
my $response = do {local $/; <CHLD_OUT>};
die "Watchman: command returned no output.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" if $response eq "";
die "Watchman: command returned invalid output: $response\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" unless $response =~ /^\{/;
my $json_pkg;
eval {
require JSON::XS;
$json_pkg = "JSON::XS";
1;
} or do {
require JSON::PP;
$json_pkg = "JSON::PP";
};
my $o = $json_pkg->new->utf8->decode($response);
if ($retry > 0 and $o->{error} and $o->{error} =~ m/unable to resolve root .* directory (.*) is not watched/) {
print STDERR "Adding '$git_work_tree' to watchman's watch list.\n";
$retry--;
qx/watchman watch "$git_work_tree"/;
die "Failed to make watchman watch '$git_work_tree'.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" if $? != 0;
# Watchman will always return all files on the first query so
# return the fast "everything is dirty" flag to git and do the
# Watchman query just to get it over with now so we won't pay
# the cost in git to look up each individual file.
print "/\0";
eval { launch_watchman() };
exit 0;
}
die "Watchman: $o->{error}.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" if $o->{error};
binmode STDOUT, ":utf8";
local $, = "\0";
print @{$o->{files}};
}
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to prepare a packed repository for use over
# dumb transports.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "post-update".
exec git update-server-info
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to verify what is about to be committed
# by applypatch from an e-mail message.
#
# The hook should exit with non-zero status after issuing an
# appropriate message if it wants to stop the commit.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "pre-applypatch".
. git-sh-setup
precommit="$(git rev-parse --git-path hooks/pre-commit)"
test -x "$precommit" && exec "$precommit" ${1+"$@"}
:
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to verify what is about to be committed.
# Called by "git commit" with no arguments. The hook should
# exit with non-zero status after issuing an appropriate message if
# it wants to stop the commit.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "pre-commit".
if git rev-parse --verify HEAD >/dev/null 2>&1
then
against=HEAD
else
# Initial commit: diff against an empty tree object
against=4b825dc642cb6eb9a060e54bf8d69288fbee4904
fi
# If you want to allow non-ASCII filenames set this variable to true.
allownonascii=$(git config --bool hooks.allownonascii)
# Redirect output to stderr.
exec 1>&2
# Cross platform projects tend to avoid non-ASCII filenames; prevent
# them from being added to the repository. We exploit the fact that the
# printable range starts at the space character and ends with tilde.
if [ "$allownonascii" != "true" ] &&
# Note that the use of brackets around a tr range is ok here, (it's
# even required, for portability to Solaris 10's /usr/bin/tr), since
# the square bracket bytes happen to fall in the designated range.
test $(git diff --cached --name-only --diff-filter=A -z $against |
LC_ALL=C tr -d '[ -~]\0' | wc -c) != 0
then
cat <<\EOF
Error: Attempt to add a non-ASCII file name.
This can cause problems if you want to work with people on other platforms.
To be portable it is advisable to rename the file.
If you know what you are doing you can disable this check using:
git config hooks.allownonascii true
EOF
exit 1
fi
# If there are whitespace errors, print the offending file names and fail.
exec git diff-index --check --cached $against --
#!/bin/sh
# An example hook script to verify what is about to be pushed. Called by "git
# push" after it has checked the remote status, but before anything has been
# pushed. If this script exits with a non-zero status nothing will be pushed.
#
# This hook is called with the following parameters:
#
# $1 -- Name of the remote to which the push is being done
# $2 -- URL to which the push is being done
#
# If pushing without using a named remote those arguments will be equal.
#
# Information about the commits which are being pushed is supplied as lines to
# the standard input in the form:
#
# <local ref> <local sha1> <remote ref> <remote sha1>
#
# This sample shows how to prevent push of commits where the log message starts
# with "WIP" (work in progress).
remote="$1"
url="$2"
z40=0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
while read local_ref local_sha remote_ref remote_sha
do
if [ "$local_sha" = $z40 ]
then
# Handle delete
:
else
if [ "$remote_sha" = $z40 ]
then
# New branch, examine all commits
range="$local_sha"
else
# Update to existing branch, examine new commits
range="$remote_sha..$local_sha"
fi
# Check for WIP commit
commit=`git rev-list -n 1 --grep '^WIP' "$range"`
if [ -n "$commit" ]
then
echo >&2 "Found WIP commit in $local_ref, not pushing"
exit 1
fi
fi
done
exit 0
#!/bin/sh
#
# Copyright (c) 2006, 2008 Junio C Hamano
#
# The "pre-rebase" hook is run just before "git rebase" starts doing
# its job, and can prevent the command from running by exiting with
# non-zero status.
#
# The hook is called with the following parameters:
#
# $1 -- the upstream the series was forked from.
# $2 -- the branch being rebased (or empty when rebasing the current branch).
#
# This sample shows how to prevent topic branches that are already
# merged to 'next' branch from getting rebased, because allowing it
# would result in rebasing already published history.
publish=next
basebranch="$1"
if test "$#" = 2
then
topic="refs/heads/$2"
else
topic=`git symbolic-ref HEAD` ||
exit 0 ;# we do not interrupt rebasing detached HEAD
fi
case "$topic" in
refs/heads/??/*)
;;
*)
exit 0 ;# we do not interrupt others.
;;
esac
# Now we are dealing with a topic branch being rebased
# on top of master. Is it OK to rebase it?
# Does the topic really exist?
git show-ref -q "$topic" || {
echo >&2 "No such branch $topic"
exit 1
}
# Is topic fully merged to master?
not_in_master=`git rev-list --pretty=oneline ^master "$topic"`
if test -z "$not_in_master"
then
echo >&2 "$topic is fully merged to master; better remove it."
exit 1 ;# we could allow it, but there is no point.
fi
# Is topic ever merged to next? If so you should not be rebasing it.
only_next_1=`git rev-list ^master "^$topic" ${publish} | sort`
only_next_2=`git rev-list ^master ${publish} | sort`
if test "$only_next_1" = "$only_next_2"
then
not_in_topic=`git rev-list "^$topic" master`
if test -z "$not_in_topic"
then
echo >&2 "$topic is already up to date with master"
exit 1 ;# we could allow it, but there is no point.
else
exit 0
fi
else
not_in_next=`git rev-list --pretty=oneline ^${publish} "$topic"`
/usr/bin/perl -e '
my $topic = $ARGV[0];
my $msg = "* $topic has commits already merged to public branch:\n";
my (%not_in_next) = map {
/^([0-9a-f]+) /;
($1 => 1);
} split(/\n/, $ARGV[1]);
for my $elem (map {
/^([0-9a-f]+) (.*)$/;
[$1 => $2];
} split(/\n/, $ARGV[2])) {
if (!exists $not_in_next{$elem->[0]}) {
if ($msg) {
print STDERR $msg;
undef $msg;
}
print STDERR " $elem->[1]\n";
}
}
' "$topic" "$not_in_next" "$not_in_master"
exit 1
fi
<<\DOC_END
This sample hook safeguards topic branches that have been
published from being rewound.
The workflow assumed here is:
* Once a topic branch forks from "master", "master" is never
merged into it again (either directly or indirectly).
* Once a topic branch is fully cooked and merged into "master",
it is deleted. If you need to build on top of it to correct
earlier mistakes, a new topic branch is created by forking at
the tip of the "master". This is not strictly necessary, but
it makes it easier to keep your history simple.
* Whenever you need to test or publish your changes to topic
branches, merge them into "next" branch.
The script, being an example, hardcodes the publish branch name
to be "next", but it is trivial to make it configurable via
$GIT_DIR/config mechanism.
With this workflow, you would want to know:
(1) ... if a topic branch has ever been merged to "next". Young
topic branches can have stupid mistakes you would rather
clean up before publishing, and things that have not been
merged into other branches can be easily rebased without
affecting other people. But once it is published, you would
not want to rewind it.
(2) ... if a topic branch has been fully merged to "master".
Then you can delete it. More importantly, you should not
build on top of it -- other people may already want to
change things related to the topic as patches against your
"master", so if you need further changes, it is better to
fork the topic (perhaps with the same name) afresh from the
tip of "master".
Let's look at this example:
o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o "next"
/ / / /
/ a---a---b A / /
/ / / /
/ / c---c---c---c B /
/ / / \ /
/ / / b---b C \ /
/ / / / \ /
---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o "master"
A, B and C are topic branches.
* A has one fix since it was merged up to "next".
* B has finished. It has been fully merged up to "master" and "next",
and is ready to be deleted.
* C has not merged to "next" at all.
We would want to allow C to be rebased, refuse A, and encourage
B to be deleted.
To compute (1):
git rev-list ^master ^topic next
git rev-list ^master next
if these match, topic has not merged in next at all.
To compute (2):
git rev-list master..topic
if this is empty, it is fully merged to "master".
DOC_END
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to make use of push options.
# The example simply echoes all push options that start with 'echoback='
# and rejects all pushes when the "reject" push option is used.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "pre-receive".
if test -n "$GIT_PUSH_OPTION_COUNT"
then
i=0
while test "$i" -lt "$GIT_PUSH_OPTION_COUNT"
do
eval "value=\$GIT_PUSH_OPTION_$i"
case "$value" in
echoback=*)
echo "echo from the pre-receive-hook: ${value#*=}" >&2
;;
reject)
exit 1
esac
i=$((i + 1))
done
fi
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to prepare the commit log message.
# Called by "git commit" with the name of the file that has the
# commit message, followed by the description of the commit
# message's source. The hook's purpose is to edit the commit
# message file. If the hook fails with a non-zero status,
# the commit is aborted.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "prepare-commit-msg".
# This hook includes three examples. The first one removes the
# "# Please enter the commit message..." help message.
#
# The second includes the output of "git diff --name-status -r"
# into the message, just before the "git status" output. It is
# commented because it doesn't cope with --amend or with squashed
# commits.
#
# The third example adds a Signed-off-by line to the message, that can
# still be edited. This is rarely a good idea.
COMMIT_MSG_FILE=$1
COMMIT_SOURCE=$2
SHA1=$3
/usr/bin/perl -i.bak -ne 'print unless(m/^. Please enter the commit message/..m/^#$/)' "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE"
# case "$COMMIT_SOURCE,$SHA1" in
# ,|template,)
# /usr/bin/perl -i.bak -pe '
# print "\n" . `git diff --cached --name-status -r`
# if /^#/ && $first++ == 0' "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE" ;;
# *) ;;
# esac
# SOB=$(git var GIT_COMMITTER_IDENT | sed -n 's/^\(.*>\).*$/Signed-off-by: \1/p')
# git interpret-trailers --in-place --trailer "$SOB" "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE"
# if test -z "$COMMIT_SOURCE"
# then
# /usr/bin/perl -i.bak -pe 'print "\n" if !$first_line++' "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE"
# fi
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to block unannotated tags from entering.
# Called by "git receive-pack" with arguments: refname sha1-old sha1-new
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "update".
#
# Config
# ------
# hooks.allowunannotated
# This boolean sets whether unannotated tags will be allowed into the
# repository. By default they won't be.
# hooks.allowdeletetag
# This boolean sets whether deleting tags will be allowed in the
# repository. By default they won't be.
# hooks.allowmodifytag
# This boolean sets whether a tag may be modified after creation. By default
# it won't be.
# hooks.allowdeletebranch
# This boolean sets whether deleting branches will be allowed in the
# repository. By default they won't be.
# hooks.denycreatebranch
# This boolean sets whether remotely creating branches will be denied
# in the repository. By default this is allowed.
#
# --- Command line
refname="$1"
oldrev="$2"
newrev="$3"
# --- Safety check
if [ -z "$GIT_DIR" ]; then
echo "Don't run this script from the command line." >&2
echo " (if you want, you could supply GIT_DIR then run" >&2
echo " $0 <ref> <oldrev> <newrev>)" >&2
exit 1
fi
if [ -z "$refname" -o -z "$oldrev" -o -z "$newrev" ]; then
echo "usage: $0 <ref> <oldrev> <newrev>" >&2
exit 1
fi
# --- Config
allowunannotated=$(git config --bool hooks.allowunannotated)
allowdeletebranch=$(git config --bool hooks.allowdeletebranch)
denycreatebranch=$(git config --bool hooks.denycreatebranch)
allowdeletetag=$(git config --bool hooks.allowdeletetag)
allowmodifytag=$(git config --bool hooks.allowmodifytag)
# check for no description
projectdesc=$(sed -e '1q' "$GIT_DIR/description")
case "$projectdesc" in
"Unnamed repository"* | "")
echo "*** Project description file hasn't been set" >&2
exit 1
;;
esac
# --- Check types
# if $newrev is 0000...0000, it's a commit to delete a ref.
zero="0000000000000000000000000000000000000000"
if [ "$newrev" = "$zero" ]; then
newrev_type=delete
else
newrev_type=$(git cat-file -t $newrev)
fi
case "$refname","$newrev_type" in
refs/tags/*,commit)
# un-annotated tag
short_refname=${refname##refs/tags/}
if [ "$allowunannotated" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** The un-annotated tag, $short_refname, is not allowed in this repository" >&2
echo "*** Use 'git tag [ -a | -s ]' for tags you want to propagate." >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/tags/*,delete)
# delete tag
if [ "$allowdeletetag" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** Deleting a tag is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/tags/*,tag)
# annotated tag
if [ "$allowmodifytag" != "true" ] && git rev-parse $refname > /dev/null 2>&1
then
echo "*** Tag '$refname' already exists." >&2
echo "*** Modifying a tag is not allowed in this repository." >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/heads/*,commit)
# branch
if [ "$oldrev" = "$zero" -a "$denycreatebranch" = "true" ]; then
echo "*** Creating a branch is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/heads/*,delete)
# delete branch
if [ "$allowdeletebranch" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** Deleting a branch is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/remotes/*,commit)
# tracking branch
;;
refs/remotes/*,delete)
# delete tracking branch
if [ "$allowdeletebranch" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** Deleting a tracking branch is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
*)
# Anything else (is there anything else?)
echo "*** Update hook: unknown type of update to ref $refname of type $newrev_type" >&2
exit 1
;;
esac
# --- Finished
exit 0
# git ls-files --others --exclude-from=.git/info/exclude
# Lines that start with '#' are comments.
# For a project mostly in C, the following would be a good set of
# exclude patterns (uncomment them if you want to use them):
# *.[oa]
# *~
xM gS $d?PHhEO?3;}~@E}I9HJ4M
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~:u2inyK*db8ބTƂ6UlDtB=җ]6No9
\ No newline at end of file
xRn09_qվUҢ!$*R-CA(rbͱVdI$ЀG*J=Itzdn\:!^N_kaǔ"HWcC +|녔Z-sѶu@RpTsث dڕJd1xDЄ]͗d T[\NtAPgŏf(7_iC(IA AC~ANhVjB`>X
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`Xbt}w
\ No newline at end of file
git2:https://github.com/rcrowley/go-metrics
\ No newline at end of file
3113b8401b8a98917cde58f8bbd42a1b1c03b1fd '3113b8401b8a98917cde58f8bbd42a1b1c03b1fd' of https://github.com/rcrowley/go-metrics
[core]
repositoryformatversion = 0
filemode = true
bare = true
ignorecase = true
precomposeunicode = true
[remote "origin"]
url = https://github.com/rcrowley/go-metrics
fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/*
Unnamed repository; edit this file 'description' to name the repository.
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to check the commit log message taken by
# applypatch from an e-mail message.
#
# The hook should exit with non-zero status after issuing an
# appropriate message if it wants to stop the commit. The hook is
# allowed to edit the commit message file.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "applypatch-msg".
. git-sh-setup
commitmsg="$(git rev-parse --git-path hooks/commit-msg)"
test -x "$commitmsg" && exec "$commitmsg" ${1+"$@"}
:
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to check the commit log message.
# Called by "git commit" with one argument, the name of the file
# that has the commit message. The hook should exit with non-zero
# status after issuing an appropriate message if it wants to stop the
# commit. The hook is allowed to edit the commit message file.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "commit-msg".
# Uncomment the below to add a Signed-off-by line to the message.
# Doing this in a hook is a bad idea in general, but the prepare-commit-msg
# hook is more suited to it.
#
# SOB=$(git var GIT_AUTHOR_IDENT | sed -n 's/^\(.*>\).*$/Signed-off-by: \1/p')
# grep -qs "^$SOB" "$1" || echo "$SOB" >> "$1"
# This example catches duplicate Signed-off-by lines.
test "" = "$(grep '^Signed-off-by: ' "$1" |
sort | uniq -c | sed -e '/^[ ]*1[ ]/d')" || {
echo >&2 Duplicate Signed-off-by lines.
exit 1
}
#!/usr/bin/perl
use strict;
use warnings;
use IPC::Open2;
# An example hook script to integrate Watchman
# (https://facebook.github.io/watchman/) with git to speed up detecting
# new and modified files.
#
# The hook is passed a version (currently 1) and a time in nanoseconds
# formatted as a string and outputs to stdout all files that have been
# modified since the given time. Paths must be relative to the root of
# the working tree and separated by a single NUL.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "query-watchman" and set
# 'git config core.fsmonitor .git/hooks/query-watchman'
#
my ($version, $time) = @ARGV;
# Check the hook interface version
if ($version == 1) {
# convert nanoseconds to seconds
$time = int $time / 1000000000;
} else {
die "Unsupported query-fsmonitor hook version '$version'.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n";
}
my $git_work_tree;
if ($^O =~ 'msys' || $^O =~ 'cygwin') {
$git_work_tree = Win32::GetCwd();
$git_work_tree =~ tr/\\/\//;
} else {
require Cwd;
$git_work_tree = Cwd::cwd();
}
my $retry = 1;
launch_watchman();
sub launch_watchman {
my $pid = open2(\*CHLD_OUT, \*CHLD_IN, 'watchman -j --no-pretty')
or die "open2() failed: $!\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n";
# In the query expression below we're asking for names of files that
# changed since $time but were not transient (ie created after
# $time but no longer exist).
#
# To accomplish this, we're using the "since" generator to use the
# recency index to select candidate nodes and "fields" to limit the
# output to file names only. Then we're using the "expression" term to
# further constrain the results.
#
# The category of transient files that we want to ignore will have a
# creation clock (cclock) newer than $time_t value and will also not
# currently exist.
my $query = <<" END";
["query", "$git_work_tree", {
"since": $time,
"fields": ["name"],
"expression": ["not", ["allof", ["since", $time, "cclock"], ["not", "exists"]]]
}]
END
print CHLD_IN $query;
close CHLD_IN;
my $response = do {local $/; <CHLD_OUT>};
die "Watchman: command returned no output.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" if $response eq "";
die "Watchman: command returned invalid output: $response\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" unless $response =~ /^\{/;
my $json_pkg;
eval {
require JSON::XS;
$json_pkg = "JSON::XS";
1;
} or do {
require JSON::PP;
$json_pkg = "JSON::PP";
};
my $o = $json_pkg->new->utf8->decode($response);
if ($retry > 0 and $o->{error} and $o->{error} =~ m/unable to resolve root .* directory (.*) is not watched/) {
print STDERR "Adding '$git_work_tree' to watchman's watch list.\n";
$retry--;
qx/watchman watch "$git_work_tree"/;
die "Failed to make watchman watch '$git_work_tree'.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" if $? != 0;
# Watchman will always return all files on the first query so
# return the fast "everything is dirty" flag to git and do the
# Watchman query just to get it over with now so we won't pay
# the cost in git to look up each individual file.
print "/\0";
eval { launch_watchman() };
exit 0;
}
die "Watchman: $o->{error}.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" if $o->{error};
binmode STDOUT, ":utf8";
local $, = "\0";
print @{$o->{files}};
}
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to prepare a packed repository for use over
# dumb transports.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "post-update".
exec git update-server-info
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to verify what is about to be committed
# by applypatch from an e-mail message.
#
# The hook should exit with non-zero status after issuing an
# appropriate message if it wants to stop the commit.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "pre-applypatch".
. git-sh-setup
precommit="$(git rev-parse --git-path hooks/pre-commit)"
test -x "$precommit" && exec "$precommit" ${1+"$@"}
:
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to verify what is about to be committed.
# Called by "git commit" with no arguments. The hook should
# exit with non-zero status after issuing an appropriate message if
# it wants to stop the commit.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "pre-commit".
if git rev-parse --verify HEAD >/dev/null 2>&1
then
against=HEAD
else
# Initial commit: diff against an empty tree object
against=4b825dc642cb6eb9a060e54bf8d69288fbee4904
fi
# If you want to allow non-ASCII filenames set this variable to true.
allownonascii=$(git config --bool hooks.allownonascii)
# Redirect output to stderr.
exec 1>&2
# Cross platform projects tend to avoid non-ASCII filenames; prevent
# them from being added to the repository. We exploit the fact that the
# printable range starts at the space character and ends with tilde.
if [ "$allownonascii" != "true" ] &&
# Note that the use of brackets around a tr range is ok here, (it's
# even required, for portability to Solaris 10's /usr/bin/tr), since
# the square bracket bytes happen to fall in the designated range.
test $(git diff --cached --name-only --diff-filter=A -z $against |
LC_ALL=C tr -d '[ -~]\0' | wc -c) != 0
then
cat <<\EOF
Error: Attempt to add a non-ASCII file name.
This can cause problems if you want to work with people on other platforms.
To be portable it is advisable to rename the file.
If you know what you are doing you can disable this check using:
git config hooks.allownonascii true
EOF
exit 1
fi
# If there are whitespace errors, print the offending file names and fail.
exec git diff-index --check --cached $against --
#!/bin/sh
# An example hook script to verify what is about to be pushed. Called by "git
# push" after it has checked the remote status, but before anything has been
# pushed. If this script exits with a non-zero status nothing will be pushed.
#
# This hook is called with the following parameters:
#
# $1 -- Name of the remote to which the push is being done
# $2 -- URL to which the push is being done
#
# If pushing without using a named remote those arguments will be equal.
#
# Information about the commits which are being pushed is supplied as lines to
# the standard input in the form:
#
# <local ref> <local sha1> <remote ref> <remote sha1>
#
# This sample shows how to prevent push of commits where the log message starts
# with "WIP" (work in progress).
remote="$1"
url="$2"
z40=0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
while read local_ref local_sha remote_ref remote_sha
do
if [ "$local_sha" = $z40 ]
then
# Handle delete
:
else
if [ "$remote_sha" = $z40 ]
then
# New branch, examine all commits
range="$local_sha"
else
# Update to existing branch, examine new commits
range="$remote_sha..$local_sha"
fi
# Check for WIP commit
commit=`git rev-list -n 1 --grep '^WIP' "$range"`
if [ -n "$commit" ]
then
echo >&2 "Found WIP commit in $local_ref, not pushing"
exit 1
fi
fi
done
exit 0
#!/bin/sh
#
# Copyright (c) 2006, 2008 Junio C Hamano
#
# The "pre-rebase" hook is run just before "git rebase" starts doing
# its job, and can prevent the command from running by exiting with
# non-zero status.
#
# The hook is called with the following parameters:
#
# $1 -- the upstream the series was forked from.
# $2 -- the branch being rebased (or empty when rebasing the current branch).
#
# This sample shows how to prevent topic branches that are already
# merged to 'next' branch from getting rebased, because allowing it
# would result in rebasing already published history.
publish=next
basebranch="$1"
if test "$#" = 2
then
topic="refs/heads/$2"
else
topic=`git symbolic-ref HEAD` ||
exit 0 ;# we do not interrupt rebasing detached HEAD
fi
case "$topic" in
refs/heads/??/*)
;;
*)
exit 0 ;# we do not interrupt others.
;;
esac
# Now we are dealing with a topic branch being rebased
# on top of master. Is it OK to rebase it?
# Does the topic really exist?
git show-ref -q "$topic" || {
echo >&2 "No such branch $topic"
exit 1
}
# Is topic fully merged to master?
not_in_master=`git rev-list --pretty=oneline ^master "$topic"`
if test -z "$not_in_master"
then
echo >&2 "$topic is fully merged to master; better remove it."
exit 1 ;# we could allow it, but there is no point.
fi
# Is topic ever merged to next? If so you should not be rebasing it.
only_next_1=`git rev-list ^master "^$topic" ${publish} | sort`
only_next_2=`git rev-list ^master ${publish} | sort`
if test "$only_next_1" = "$only_next_2"
then
not_in_topic=`git rev-list "^$topic" master`
if test -z "$not_in_topic"
then
echo >&2 "$topic is already up to date with master"
exit 1 ;# we could allow it, but there is no point.
else
exit 0
fi
else
not_in_next=`git rev-list --pretty=oneline ^${publish} "$topic"`
/usr/bin/perl -e '
my $topic = $ARGV[0];
my $msg = "* $topic has commits already merged to public branch:\n";
my (%not_in_next) = map {
/^([0-9a-f]+) /;
($1 => 1);
} split(/\n/, $ARGV[1]);
for my $elem (map {
/^([0-9a-f]+) (.*)$/;
[$1 => $2];
} split(/\n/, $ARGV[2])) {
if (!exists $not_in_next{$elem->[0]}) {
if ($msg) {
print STDERR $msg;
undef $msg;
}
print STDERR " $elem->[1]\n";
}
}
' "$topic" "$not_in_next" "$not_in_master"
exit 1
fi
<<\DOC_END
This sample hook safeguards topic branches that have been
published from being rewound.
The workflow assumed here is:
* Once a topic branch forks from "master", "master" is never
merged into it again (either directly or indirectly).
* Once a topic branch is fully cooked and merged into "master",
it is deleted. If you need to build on top of it to correct
earlier mistakes, a new topic branch is created by forking at
the tip of the "master". This is not strictly necessary, but
it makes it easier to keep your history simple.
* Whenever you need to test or publish your changes to topic
branches, merge them into "next" branch.
The script, being an example, hardcodes the publish branch name
to be "next", but it is trivial to make it configurable via
$GIT_DIR/config mechanism.
With this workflow, you would want to know:
(1) ... if a topic branch has ever been merged to "next". Young
topic branches can have stupid mistakes you would rather
clean up before publishing, and things that have not been
merged into other branches can be easily rebased without
affecting other people. But once it is published, you would
not want to rewind it.
(2) ... if a topic branch has been fully merged to "master".
Then you can delete it. More importantly, you should not
build on top of it -- other people may already want to
change things related to the topic as patches against your
"master", so if you need further changes, it is better to
fork the topic (perhaps with the same name) afresh from the
tip of "master".
Let's look at this example:
o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o "next"
/ / / /
/ a---a---b A / /
/ / / /
/ / c---c---c---c B /
/ / / \ /
/ / / b---b C \ /
/ / / / \ /
---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o "master"
A, B and C are topic branches.
* A has one fix since it was merged up to "next".
* B has finished. It has been fully merged up to "master" and "next",
and is ready to be deleted.
* C has not merged to "next" at all.
We would want to allow C to be rebased, refuse A, and encourage
B to be deleted.
To compute (1):
git rev-list ^master ^topic next
git rev-list ^master next
if these match, topic has not merged in next at all.
To compute (2):
git rev-list master..topic
if this is empty, it is fully merged to "master".
DOC_END
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to make use of push options.
# The example simply echoes all push options that start with 'echoback='
# and rejects all pushes when the "reject" push option is used.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "pre-receive".
if test -n "$GIT_PUSH_OPTION_COUNT"
then
i=0
while test "$i" -lt "$GIT_PUSH_OPTION_COUNT"
do
eval "value=\$GIT_PUSH_OPTION_$i"
case "$value" in
echoback=*)
echo "echo from the pre-receive-hook: ${value#*=}" >&2
;;
reject)
exit 1
esac
i=$((i + 1))
done
fi
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to prepare the commit log message.
# Called by "git commit" with the name of the file that has the
# commit message, followed by the description of the commit
# message's source. The hook's purpose is to edit the commit
# message file. If the hook fails with a non-zero status,
# the commit is aborted.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "prepare-commit-msg".
# This hook includes three examples. The first one removes the
# "# Please enter the commit message..." help message.
#
# The second includes the output of "git diff --name-status -r"
# into the message, just before the "git status" output. It is
# commented because it doesn't cope with --amend or with squashed
# commits.
#
# The third example adds a Signed-off-by line to the message, that can
# still be edited. This is rarely a good idea.
COMMIT_MSG_FILE=$1
COMMIT_SOURCE=$2
SHA1=$3
/usr/bin/perl -i.bak -ne 'print unless(m/^. Please enter the commit message/..m/^#$/)' "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE"
# case "$COMMIT_SOURCE,$SHA1" in
# ,|template,)
# /usr/bin/perl -i.bak -pe '
# print "\n" . `git diff --cached --name-status -r`
# if /^#/ && $first++ == 0' "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE" ;;
# *) ;;
# esac
# SOB=$(git var GIT_COMMITTER_IDENT | sed -n 's/^\(.*>\).*$/Signed-off-by: \1/p')
# git interpret-trailers --in-place --trailer "$SOB" "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE"
# if test -z "$COMMIT_SOURCE"
# then
# /usr/bin/perl -i.bak -pe 'print "\n" if !$first_line++' "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE"
# fi
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to block unannotated tags from entering.
# Called by "git receive-pack" with arguments: refname sha1-old sha1-new
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "update".
#
# Config
# ------
# hooks.allowunannotated
# This boolean sets whether unannotated tags will be allowed into the
# repository. By default they won't be.
# hooks.allowdeletetag
# This boolean sets whether deleting tags will be allowed in the
# repository. By default they won't be.
# hooks.allowmodifytag
# This boolean sets whether a tag may be modified after creation. By default
# it won't be.
# hooks.allowdeletebranch
# This boolean sets whether deleting branches will be allowed in the
# repository. By default they won't be.
# hooks.denycreatebranch
# This boolean sets whether remotely creating branches will be denied
# in the repository. By default this is allowed.
#
# --- Command line
refname="$1"
oldrev="$2"
newrev="$3"
# --- Safety check
if [ -z "$GIT_DIR" ]; then
echo "Don't run this script from the command line." >&2
echo " (if you want, you could supply GIT_DIR then run" >&2
echo " $0 <ref> <oldrev> <newrev>)" >&2
exit 1
fi
if [ -z "$refname" -o -z "$oldrev" -o -z "$newrev" ]; then
echo "usage: $0 <ref> <oldrev> <newrev>" >&2
exit 1
fi
# --- Config
allowunannotated=$(git config --bool hooks.allowunannotated)
allowdeletebranch=$(git config --bool hooks.allowdeletebranch)
denycreatebranch=$(git config --bool hooks.denycreatebranch)
allowdeletetag=$(git config --bool hooks.allowdeletetag)
allowmodifytag=$(git config --bool hooks.allowmodifytag)
# check for no description
projectdesc=$(sed -e '1q' "$GIT_DIR/description")
case "$projectdesc" in
"Unnamed repository"* | "")
echo "*** Project description file hasn't been set" >&2
exit 1
;;
esac
# --- Check types
# if $newrev is 0000...0000, it's a commit to delete a ref.
zero="0000000000000000000000000000000000000000"
if [ "$newrev" = "$zero" ]; then
newrev_type=delete
else
newrev_type=$(git cat-file -t $newrev)
fi
case "$refname","$newrev_type" in
refs/tags/*,commit)
# un-annotated tag
short_refname=${refname##refs/tags/}
if [ "$allowunannotated" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** The un-annotated tag, $short_refname, is not allowed in this repository" >&2
echo "*** Use 'git tag [ -a | -s ]' for tags you want to propagate." >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/tags/*,delete)
# delete tag
if [ "$allowdeletetag" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** Deleting a tag is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/tags/*,tag)
# annotated tag
if [ "$allowmodifytag" != "true" ] && git rev-parse $refname > /dev/null 2>&1
then
echo "*** Tag '$refname' already exists." >&2
echo "*** Modifying a tag is not allowed in this repository." >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/heads/*,commit)
# branch
if [ "$oldrev" = "$zero" -a "$denycreatebranch" = "true" ]; then
echo "*** Creating a branch is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/heads/*,delete)
# delete branch
if [ "$allowdeletebranch" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** Deleting a branch is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/remotes/*,commit)
# tracking branch
;;
refs/remotes/*,delete)
# delete tracking branch
if [ "$allowdeletebranch" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** Deleting a tracking branch is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
*)
# Anything else (is there anything else?)
echo "*** Update hook: unknown type of update to ref $refname of type $newrev_type" >&2
exit 1
;;
esac
# --- Finished
exit 0
# git ls-files --others --exclude-from=.git/info/exclude
# Lines that start with '#' are comments.
# For a project mostly in C, the following would be a good set of
# exclude patterns (uncomment them if you want to use them):
# *.[oa]
# *~
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a#D e V*
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git2:https://github.com/eapache/queue
\ No newline at end of file
44cc805cf13205b55f69e14bcb69867d1ae92f98 tag 'v1.1.0' of https://github.com/eapache/queue
[core]
repositoryformatversion = 0
filemode = true
bare = true
ignorecase = true
precomposeunicode = true
[remote "origin"]
url = https://github.com/eapache/queue
fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/*
Unnamed repository; edit this file 'description' to name the repository.
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to check the commit log message taken by
# applypatch from an e-mail message.
#
# The hook should exit with non-zero status after issuing an
# appropriate message if it wants to stop the commit. The hook is
# allowed to edit the commit message file.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "applypatch-msg".
. git-sh-setup
commitmsg="$(git rev-parse --git-path hooks/commit-msg)"
test -x "$commitmsg" && exec "$commitmsg" ${1+"$@"}
:
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to check the commit log message.
# Called by "git commit" with one argument, the name of the file
# that has the commit message. The hook should exit with non-zero
# status after issuing an appropriate message if it wants to stop the
# commit. The hook is allowed to edit the commit message file.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "commit-msg".
# Uncomment the below to add a Signed-off-by line to the message.
# Doing this in a hook is a bad idea in general, but the prepare-commit-msg
# hook is more suited to it.
#
# SOB=$(git var GIT_AUTHOR_IDENT | sed -n 's/^\(.*>\).*$/Signed-off-by: \1/p')
# grep -qs "^$SOB" "$1" || echo "$SOB" >> "$1"
# This example catches duplicate Signed-off-by lines.
test "" = "$(grep '^Signed-off-by: ' "$1" |
sort | uniq -c | sed -e '/^[ ]*1[ ]/d')" || {
echo >&2 Duplicate Signed-off-by lines.
exit 1
}
#!/usr/bin/perl
use strict;
use warnings;
use IPC::Open2;
# An example hook script to integrate Watchman
# (https://facebook.github.io/watchman/) with git to speed up detecting
# new and modified files.
#
# The hook is passed a version (currently 1) and a time in nanoseconds
# formatted as a string and outputs to stdout all files that have been
# modified since the given time. Paths must be relative to the root of
# the working tree and separated by a single NUL.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "query-watchman" and set
# 'git config core.fsmonitor .git/hooks/query-watchman'
#
my ($version, $time) = @ARGV;
# Check the hook interface version
if ($version == 1) {
# convert nanoseconds to seconds
$time = int $time / 1000000000;
} else {
die "Unsupported query-fsmonitor hook version '$version'.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n";
}
my $git_work_tree;
if ($^O =~ 'msys' || $^O =~ 'cygwin') {
$git_work_tree = Win32::GetCwd();
$git_work_tree =~ tr/\\/\//;
} else {
require Cwd;
$git_work_tree = Cwd::cwd();
}
my $retry = 1;
launch_watchman();
sub launch_watchman {
my $pid = open2(\*CHLD_OUT, \*CHLD_IN, 'watchman -j --no-pretty')
or die "open2() failed: $!\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n";
# In the query expression below we're asking for names of files that
# changed since $time but were not transient (ie created after
# $time but no longer exist).
#
# To accomplish this, we're using the "since" generator to use the
# recency index to select candidate nodes and "fields" to limit the
# output to file names only. Then we're using the "expression" term to
# further constrain the results.
#
# The category of transient files that we want to ignore will have a
# creation clock (cclock) newer than $time_t value and will also not
# currently exist.
my $query = <<" END";
["query", "$git_work_tree", {
"since": $time,
"fields": ["name"],
"expression": ["not", ["allof", ["since", $time, "cclock"], ["not", "exists"]]]
}]
END
print CHLD_IN $query;
close CHLD_IN;
my $response = do {local $/; <CHLD_OUT>};
die "Watchman: command returned no output.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" if $response eq "";
die "Watchman: command returned invalid output: $response\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" unless $response =~ /^\{/;
my $json_pkg;
eval {
require JSON::XS;
$json_pkg = "JSON::XS";
1;
} or do {
require JSON::PP;
$json_pkg = "JSON::PP";
};
my $o = $json_pkg->new->utf8->decode($response);
if ($retry > 0 and $o->{error} and $o->{error} =~ m/unable to resolve root .* directory (.*) is not watched/) {
print STDERR "Adding '$git_work_tree' to watchman's watch list.\n";
$retry--;
qx/watchman watch "$git_work_tree"/;
die "Failed to make watchman watch '$git_work_tree'.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" if $? != 0;
# Watchman will always return all files on the first query so
# return the fast "everything is dirty" flag to git and do the
# Watchman query just to get it over with now so we won't pay
# the cost in git to look up each individual file.
print "/\0";
eval { launch_watchman() };
exit 0;
}
die "Watchman: $o->{error}.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" if $o->{error};
binmode STDOUT, ":utf8";
local $, = "\0";
print @{$o->{files}};
}
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to prepare a packed repository for use over
# dumb transports.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "post-update".
exec git update-server-info
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to verify what is about to be committed
# by applypatch from an e-mail message.
#
# The hook should exit with non-zero status after issuing an
# appropriate message if it wants to stop the commit.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "pre-applypatch".
. git-sh-setup
precommit="$(git rev-parse --git-path hooks/pre-commit)"
test -x "$precommit" && exec "$precommit" ${1+"$@"}
:
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to verify what is about to be committed.
# Called by "git commit" with no arguments. The hook should
# exit with non-zero status after issuing an appropriate message if
# it wants to stop the commit.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "pre-commit".
if git rev-parse --verify HEAD >/dev/null 2>&1
then
against=HEAD
else
# Initial commit: diff against an empty tree object
against=4b825dc642cb6eb9a060e54bf8d69288fbee4904
fi
# If you want to allow non-ASCII filenames set this variable to true.
allownonascii=$(git config --bool hooks.allownonascii)
# Redirect output to stderr.
exec 1>&2
# Cross platform projects tend to avoid non-ASCII filenames; prevent
# them from being added to the repository. We exploit the fact that the
# printable range starts at the space character and ends with tilde.
if [ "$allownonascii" != "true" ] &&
# Note that the use of brackets around a tr range is ok here, (it's
# even required, for portability to Solaris 10's /usr/bin/tr), since
# the square bracket bytes happen to fall in the designated range.
test $(git diff --cached --name-only --diff-filter=A -z $against |
LC_ALL=C tr -d '[ -~]\0' | wc -c) != 0
then
cat <<\EOF
Error: Attempt to add a non-ASCII file name.
This can cause problems if you want to work with people on other platforms.
To be portable it is advisable to rename the file.
If you know what you are doing you can disable this check using:
git config hooks.allownonascii true
EOF
exit 1
fi
# If there are whitespace errors, print the offending file names and fail.
exec git diff-index --check --cached $against --
#!/bin/sh
# An example hook script to verify what is about to be pushed. Called by "git
# push" after it has checked the remote status, but before anything has been
# pushed. If this script exits with a non-zero status nothing will be pushed.
#
# This hook is called with the following parameters:
#
# $1 -- Name of the remote to which the push is being done
# $2 -- URL to which the push is being done
#
# If pushing without using a named remote those arguments will be equal.
#
# Information about the commits which are being pushed is supplied as lines to
# the standard input in the form:
#
# <local ref> <local sha1> <remote ref> <remote sha1>
#
# This sample shows how to prevent push of commits where the log message starts
# with "WIP" (work in progress).
remote="$1"
url="$2"
z40=0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
while read local_ref local_sha remote_ref remote_sha
do
if [ "$local_sha" = $z40 ]
then
# Handle delete
:
else
if [ "$remote_sha" = $z40 ]
then
# New branch, examine all commits
range="$local_sha"
else
# Update to existing branch, examine new commits
range="$remote_sha..$local_sha"
fi
# Check for WIP commit
commit=`git rev-list -n 1 --grep '^WIP' "$range"`
if [ -n "$commit" ]
then
echo >&2 "Found WIP commit in $local_ref, not pushing"
exit 1
fi
fi
done
exit 0
#!/bin/sh
#
# Copyright (c) 2006, 2008 Junio C Hamano
#
# The "pre-rebase" hook is run just before "git rebase" starts doing
# its job, and can prevent the command from running by exiting with
# non-zero status.
#
# The hook is called with the following parameters:
#
# $1 -- the upstream the series was forked from.
# $2 -- the branch being rebased (or empty when rebasing the current branch).
#
# This sample shows how to prevent topic branches that are already
# merged to 'next' branch from getting rebased, because allowing it
# would result in rebasing already published history.
publish=next
basebranch="$1"
if test "$#" = 2
then
topic="refs/heads/$2"
else
topic=`git symbolic-ref HEAD` ||
exit 0 ;# we do not interrupt rebasing detached HEAD
fi
case "$topic" in
refs/heads/??/*)
;;
*)
exit 0 ;# we do not interrupt others.
;;
esac
# Now we are dealing with a topic branch being rebased
# on top of master. Is it OK to rebase it?
# Does the topic really exist?
git show-ref -q "$topic" || {
echo >&2 "No such branch $topic"
exit 1
}
# Is topic fully merged to master?
not_in_master=`git rev-list --pretty=oneline ^master "$topic"`
if test -z "$not_in_master"
then
echo >&2 "$topic is fully merged to master; better remove it."
exit 1 ;# we could allow it, but there is no point.
fi
# Is topic ever merged to next? If so you should not be rebasing it.
only_next_1=`git rev-list ^master "^$topic" ${publish} | sort`
only_next_2=`git rev-list ^master ${publish} | sort`
if test "$only_next_1" = "$only_next_2"
then
not_in_topic=`git rev-list "^$topic" master`
if test -z "$not_in_topic"
then
echo >&2 "$topic is already up to date with master"
exit 1 ;# we could allow it, but there is no point.
else
exit 0
fi
else
not_in_next=`git rev-list --pretty=oneline ^${publish} "$topic"`
/usr/bin/perl -e '
my $topic = $ARGV[0];
my $msg = "* $topic has commits already merged to public branch:\n";
my (%not_in_next) = map {
/^([0-9a-f]+) /;
($1 => 1);
} split(/\n/, $ARGV[1]);
for my $elem (map {
/^([0-9a-f]+) (.*)$/;
[$1 => $2];
} split(/\n/, $ARGV[2])) {
if (!exists $not_in_next{$elem->[0]}) {
if ($msg) {
print STDERR $msg;
undef $msg;
}
print STDERR " $elem->[1]\n";
}
}
' "$topic" "$not_in_next" "$not_in_master"
exit 1
fi
<<\DOC_END
This sample hook safeguards topic branches that have been
published from being rewound.
The workflow assumed here is:
* Once a topic branch forks from "master", "master" is never
merged into it again (either directly or indirectly).
* Once a topic branch is fully cooked and merged into "master",
it is deleted. If you need to build on top of it to correct
earlier mistakes, a new topic branch is created by forking at
the tip of the "master". This is not strictly necessary, but
it makes it easier to keep your history simple.
* Whenever you need to test or publish your changes to topic
branches, merge them into "next" branch.
The script, being an example, hardcodes the publish branch name
to be "next", but it is trivial to make it configurable via
$GIT_DIR/config mechanism.
With this workflow, you would want to know:
(1) ... if a topic branch has ever been merged to "next". Young
topic branches can have stupid mistakes you would rather
clean up before publishing, and things that have not been
merged into other branches can be easily rebased without
affecting other people. But once it is published, you would
not want to rewind it.
(2) ... if a topic branch has been fully merged to "master".
Then you can delete it. More importantly, you should not
build on top of it -- other people may already want to
change things related to the topic as patches against your
"master", so if you need further changes, it is better to
fork the topic (perhaps with the same name) afresh from the
tip of "master".
Let's look at this example:
o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o "next"
/ / / /
/ a---a---b A / /
/ / / /
/ / c---c---c---c B /
/ / / \ /
/ / / b---b C \ /
/ / / / \ /
---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o "master"
A, B and C are topic branches.
* A has one fix since it was merged up to "next".
* B has finished. It has been fully merged up to "master" and "next",
and is ready to be deleted.
* C has not merged to "next" at all.
We would want to allow C to be rebased, refuse A, and encourage
B to be deleted.
To compute (1):
git rev-list ^master ^topic next
git rev-list ^master next
if these match, topic has not merged in next at all.
To compute (2):
git rev-list master..topic
if this is empty, it is fully merged to "master".
DOC_END
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to make use of push options.
# The example simply echoes all push options that start with 'echoback='
# and rejects all pushes when the "reject" push option is used.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "pre-receive".
if test -n "$GIT_PUSH_OPTION_COUNT"
then
i=0
while test "$i" -lt "$GIT_PUSH_OPTION_COUNT"
do
eval "value=\$GIT_PUSH_OPTION_$i"
case "$value" in
echoback=*)
echo "echo from the pre-receive-hook: ${value#*=}" >&2
;;
reject)
exit 1
esac
i=$((i + 1))
done
fi
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to prepare the commit log message.
# Called by "git commit" with the name of the file that has the
# commit message, followed by the description of the commit
# message's source. The hook's purpose is to edit the commit
# message file. If the hook fails with a non-zero status,
# the commit is aborted.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "prepare-commit-msg".
# This hook includes three examples. The first one removes the
# "# Please enter the commit message..." help message.
#
# The second includes the output of "git diff --name-status -r"
# into the message, just before the "git status" output. It is
# commented because it doesn't cope with --amend or with squashed
# commits.
#
# The third example adds a Signed-off-by line to the message, that can
# still be edited. This is rarely a good idea.
COMMIT_MSG_FILE=$1
COMMIT_SOURCE=$2
SHA1=$3
/usr/bin/perl -i.bak -ne 'print unless(m/^. Please enter the commit message/..m/^#$/)' "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE"
# case "$COMMIT_SOURCE,$SHA1" in
# ,|template,)
# /usr/bin/perl -i.bak -pe '
# print "\n" . `git diff --cached --name-status -r`
# if /^#/ && $first++ == 0' "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE" ;;
# *) ;;
# esac
# SOB=$(git var GIT_COMMITTER_IDENT | sed -n 's/^\(.*>\).*$/Signed-off-by: \1/p')
# git interpret-trailers --in-place --trailer "$SOB" "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE"
# if test -z "$COMMIT_SOURCE"
# then
# /usr/bin/perl -i.bak -pe 'print "\n" if !$first_line++' "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE"
# fi
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to block unannotated tags from entering.
# Called by "git receive-pack" with arguments: refname sha1-old sha1-new
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "update".
#
# Config
# ------
# hooks.allowunannotated
# This boolean sets whether unannotated tags will be allowed into the
# repository. By default they won't be.
# hooks.allowdeletetag
# This boolean sets whether deleting tags will be allowed in the
# repository. By default they won't be.
# hooks.allowmodifytag
# This boolean sets whether a tag may be modified after creation. By default
# it won't be.
# hooks.allowdeletebranch
# This boolean sets whether deleting branches will be allowed in the
# repository. By default they won't be.
# hooks.denycreatebranch
# This boolean sets whether remotely creating branches will be denied
# in the repository. By default this is allowed.
#
# --- Command line
refname="$1"
oldrev="$2"
newrev="$3"
# --- Safety check
if [ -z "$GIT_DIR" ]; then
echo "Don't run this script from the command line." >&2
echo " (if you want, you could supply GIT_DIR then run" >&2
echo " $0 <ref> <oldrev> <newrev>)" >&2
exit 1
fi
if [ -z "$refname" -o -z "$oldrev" -o -z "$newrev" ]; then
echo "usage: $0 <ref> <oldrev> <newrev>" >&2
exit 1
fi
# --- Config
allowunannotated=$(git config --bool hooks.allowunannotated)
allowdeletebranch=$(git config --bool hooks.allowdeletebranch)
denycreatebranch=$(git config --bool hooks.denycreatebranch)
allowdeletetag=$(git config --bool hooks.allowdeletetag)
allowmodifytag=$(git config --bool hooks.allowmodifytag)
# check for no description
projectdesc=$(sed -e '1q' "$GIT_DIR/description")
case "$projectdesc" in
"Unnamed repository"* | "")
echo "*** Project description file hasn't been set" >&2
exit 1
;;
esac
# --- Check types
# if $newrev is 0000...0000, it's a commit to delete a ref.
zero="0000000000000000000000000000000000000000"
if [ "$newrev" = "$zero" ]; then
newrev_type=delete
else
newrev_type=$(git cat-file -t $newrev)
fi
case "$refname","$newrev_type" in
refs/tags/*,commit)
# un-annotated tag
short_refname=${refname##refs/tags/}
if [ "$allowunannotated" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** The un-annotated tag, $short_refname, is not allowed in this repository" >&2
echo "*** Use 'git tag [ -a | -s ]' for tags you want to propagate." >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/tags/*,delete)
# delete tag
if [ "$allowdeletetag" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** Deleting a tag is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/tags/*,tag)
# annotated tag
if [ "$allowmodifytag" != "true" ] && git rev-parse $refname > /dev/null 2>&1
then
echo "*** Tag '$refname' already exists." >&2
echo "*** Modifying a tag is not allowed in this repository." >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/heads/*,commit)
# branch
if [ "$oldrev" = "$zero" -a "$denycreatebranch" = "true" ]; then
echo "*** Creating a branch is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/heads/*,delete)
# delete branch
if [ "$allowdeletebranch" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** Deleting a branch is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/remotes/*,commit)
# tracking branch
;;
refs/remotes/*,delete)
# delete tracking branch
if [ "$allowdeletebranch" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** Deleting a tracking branch is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
*)
# Anything else (is there anything else?)
echo "*** Update hook: unknown type of update to ref $refname of type $newrev_type" >&2
exit 1
;;
esac
# --- Finished
exit 0
# git ls-files --others --exclude-from=.git/info/exclude
# Lines that start with '#' are comments.
# For a project mostly in C, the following would be a good set of
# exclude patterns (uncomment them if you want to use them):
# *.[oa]
# *~
xuN ])nF(dbfcI)$¥R@psW2ƹJMsΊFQAɞbݎqő$5"B-IokFRcL( AA)G?^`a Z\k=L2E\֓Kz dk)m)jἥLu2WO{<u]!g}/ arzxnؼ퀥Plh
\ No newline at end of file
git2:https://go.googlesource.com/sync
\ No newline at end of file
42b317875d0fa942474b76e1b46a6060d720ae6e '42b317875d0fa942474b76e1b46a6060d720ae6e' of https://go.googlesource.com/sync
[core]
repositoryformatversion = 0
filemode = true
bare = true
ignorecase = true
precomposeunicode = true
[remote "origin"]
url = https://go.googlesource.com/sync
fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/*
Unnamed repository; edit this file 'description' to name the repository.
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to check the commit log message taken by
# applypatch from an e-mail message.
#
# The hook should exit with non-zero status after issuing an
# appropriate message if it wants to stop the commit. The hook is
# allowed to edit the commit message file.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "applypatch-msg".
. git-sh-setup
commitmsg="$(git rev-parse --git-path hooks/commit-msg)"
test -x "$commitmsg" && exec "$commitmsg" ${1+"$@"}
:
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to check the commit log message.
# Called by "git commit" with one argument, the name of the file
# that has the commit message. The hook should exit with non-zero
# status after issuing an appropriate message if it wants to stop the
# commit. The hook is allowed to edit the commit message file.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "commit-msg".
# Uncomment the below to add a Signed-off-by line to the message.
# Doing this in a hook is a bad idea in general, but the prepare-commit-msg
# hook is more suited to it.
#
# SOB=$(git var GIT_AUTHOR_IDENT | sed -n 's/^\(.*>\).*$/Signed-off-by: \1/p')
# grep -qs "^$SOB" "$1" || echo "$SOB" >> "$1"
# This example catches duplicate Signed-off-by lines.
test "" = "$(grep '^Signed-off-by: ' "$1" |
sort | uniq -c | sed -e '/^[ ]*1[ ]/d')" || {
echo >&2 Duplicate Signed-off-by lines.
exit 1
}
#!/usr/bin/perl
use strict;
use warnings;
use IPC::Open2;
# An example hook script to integrate Watchman
# (https://facebook.github.io/watchman/) with git to speed up detecting
# new and modified files.
#
# The hook is passed a version (currently 1) and a time in nanoseconds
# formatted as a string and outputs to stdout all files that have been
# modified since the given time. Paths must be relative to the root of
# the working tree and separated by a single NUL.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "query-watchman" and set
# 'git config core.fsmonitor .git/hooks/query-watchman'
#
my ($version, $time) = @ARGV;
# Check the hook interface version
if ($version == 1) {
# convert nanoseconds to seconds
$time = int $time / 1000000000;
} else {
die "Unsupported query-fsmonitor hook version '$version'.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n";
}
my $git_work_tree;
if ($^O =~ 'msys' || $^O =~ 'cygwin') {
$git_work_tree = Win32::GetCwd();
$git_work_tree =~ tr/\\/\//;
} else {
require Cwd;
$git_work_tree = Cwd::cwd();
}
my $retry = 1;
launch_watchman();
sub launch_watchman {
my $pid = open2(\*CHLD_OUT, \*CHLD_IN, 'watchman -j --no-pretty')
or die "open2() failed: $!\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n";
# In the query expression below we're asking for names of files that
# changed since $time but were not transient (ie created after
# $time but no longer exist).
#
# To accomplish this, we're using the "since" generator to use the
# recency index to select candidate nodes and "fields" to limit the
# output to file names only. Then we're using the "expression" term to
# further constrain the results.
#
# The category of transient files that we want to ignore will have a
# creation clock (cclock) newer than $time_t value and will also not
# currently exist.
my $query = <<" END";
["query", "$git_work_tree", {
"since": $time,
"fields": ["name"],
"expression": ["not", ["allof", ["since", $time, "cclock"], ["not", "exists"]]]
}]
END
print CHLD_IN $query;
close CHLD_IN;
my $response = do {local $/; <CHLD_OUT>};
die "Watchman: command returned no output.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" if $response eq "";
die "Watchman: command returned invalid output: $response\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" unless $response =~ /^\{/;
my $json_pkg;
eval {
require JSON::XS;
$json_pkg = "JSON::XS";
1;
} or do {
require JSON::PP;
$json_pkg = "JSON::PP";
};
my $o = $json_pkg->new->utf8->decode($response);
if ($retry > 0 and $o->{error} and $o->{error} =~ m/unable to resolve root .* directory (.*) is not watched/) {
print STDERR "Adding '$git_work_tree' to watchman's watch list.\n";
$retry--;
qx/watchman watch "$git_work_tree"/;
die "Failed to make watchman watch '$git_work_tree'.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" if $? != 0;
# Watchman will always return all files on the first query so
# return the fast "everything is dirty" flag to git and do the
# Watchman query just to get it over with now so we won't pay
# the cost in git to look up each individual file.
print "/\0";
eval { launch_watchman() };
exit 0;
}
die "Watchman: $o->{error}.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" if $o->{error};
binmode STDOUT, ":utf8";
local $, = "\0";
print @{$o->{files}};
}
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to prepare a packed repository for use over
# dumb transports.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "post-update".
exec git update-server-info
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to verify what is about to be committed
# by applypatch from an e-mail message.
#
# The hook should exit with non-zero status after issuing an
# appropriate message if it wants to stop the commit.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "pre-applypatch".
. git-sh-setup
precommit="$(git rev-parse --git-path hooks/pre-commit)"
test -x "$precommit" && exec "$precommit" ${1+"$@"}
:
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to verify what is about to be committed.
# Called by "git commit" with no arguments. The hook should
# exit with non-zero status after issuing an appropriate message if
# it wants to stop the commit.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "pre-commit".
if git rev-parse --verify HEAD >/dev/null 2>&1
then
against=HEAD
else
# Initial commit: diff against an empty tree object
against=4b825dc642cb6eb9a060e54bf8d69288fbee4904
fi
# If you want to allow non-ASCII filenames set this variable to true.
allownonascii=$(git config --bool hooks.allownonascii)
# Redirect output to stderr.
exec 1>&2
# Cross platform projects tend to avoid non-ASCII filenames; prevent
# them from being added to the repository. We exploit the fact that the
# printable range starts at the space character and ends with tilde.
if [ "$allownonascii" != "true" ] &&
# Note that the use of brackets around a tr range is ok here, (it's
# even required, for portability to Solaris 10's /usr/bin/tr), since
# the square bracket bytes happen to fall in the designated range.
test $(git diff --cached --name-only --diff-filter=A -z $against |
LC_ALL=C tr -d '[ -~]\0' | wc -c) != 0
then
cat <<\EOF
Error: Attempt to add a non-ASCII file name.
This can cause problems if you want to work with people on other platforms.
To be portable it is advisable to rename the file.
If you know what you are doing you can disable this check using:
git config hooks.allownonascii true
EOF
exit 1
fi
# If there are whitespace errors, print the offending file names and fail.
exec git diff-index --check --cached $against --
#!/bin/sh
# An example hook script to verify what is about to be pushed. Called by "git
# push" after it has checked the remote status, but before anything has been
# pushed. If this script exits with a non-zero status nothing will be pushed.
#
# This hook is called with the following parameters:
#
# $1 -- Name of the remote to which the push is being done
# $2 -- URL to which the push is being done
#
# If pushing without using a named remote those arguments will be equal.
#
# Information about the commits which are being pushed is supplied as lines to
# the standard input in the form:
#
# <local ref> <local sha1> <remote ref> <remote sha1>
#
# This sample shows how to prevent push of commits where the log message starts
# with "WIP" (work in progress).
remote="$1"
url="$2"
z40=0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
while read local_ref local_sha remote_ref remote_sha
do
if [ "$local_sha" = $z40 ]
then
# Handle delete
:
else
if [ "$remote_sha" = $z40 ]
then
# New branch, examine all commits
range="$local_sha"
else
# Update to existing branch, examine new commits
range="$remote_sha..$local_sha"
fi
# Check for WIP commit
commit=`git rev-list -n 1 --grep '^WIP' "$range"`
if [ -n "$commit" ]
then
echo >&2 "Found WIP commit in $local_ref, not pushing"
exit 1
fi
fi
done
exit 0
#!/bin/sh
#
# Copyright (c) 2006, 2008 Junio C Hamano
#
# The "pre-rebase" hook is run just before "git rebase" starts doing
# its job, and can prevent the command from running by exiting with
# non-zero status.
#
# The hook is called with the following parameters:
#
# $1 -- the upstream the series was forked from.
# $2 -- the branch being rebased (or empty when rebasing the current branch).
#
# This sample shows how to prevent topic branches that are already
# merged to 'next' branch from getting rebased, because allowing it
# would result in rebasing already published history.
publish=next
basebranch="$1"
if test "$#" = 2
then
topic="refs/heads/$2"
else
topic=`git symbolic-ref HEAD` ||
exit 0 ;# we do not interrupt rebasing detached HEAD
fi
case "$topic" in
refs/heads/??/*)
;;
*)
exit 0 ;# we do not interrupt others.
;;
esac
# Now we are dealing with a topic branch being rebased
# on top of master. Is it OK to rebase it?
# Does the topic really exist?
git show-ref -q "$topic" || {
echo >&2 "No such branch $topic"
exit 1
}
# Is topic fully merged to master?
not_in_master=`git rev-list --pretty=oneline ^master "$topic"`
if test -z "$not_in_master"
then
echo >&2 "$topic is fully merged to master; better remove it."
exit 1 ;# we could allow it, but there is no point.
fi
# Is topic ever merged to next? If so you should not be rebasing it.
only_next_1=`git rev-list ^master "^$topic" ${publish} | sort`
only_next_2=`git rev-list ^master ${publish} | sort`
if test "$only_next_1" = "$only_next_2"
then
not_in_topic=`git rev-list "^$topic" master`
if test -z "$not_in_topic"
then
echo >&2 "$topic is already up to date with master"
exit 1 ;# we could allow it, but there is no point.
else
exit 0
fi
else
not_in_next=`git rev-list --pretty=oneline ^${publish} "$topic"`
/usr/bin/perl -e '
my $topic = $ARGV[0];
my $msg = "* $topic has commits already merged to public branch:\n";
my (%not_in_next) = map {
/^([0-9a-f]+) /;
($1 => 1);
} split(/\n/, $ARGV[1]);
for my $elem (map {
/^([0-9a-f]+) (.*)$/;
[$1 => $2];
} split(/\n/, $ARGV[2])) {
if (!exists $not_in_next{$elem->[0]}) {
if ($msg) {
print STDERR $msg;
undef $msg;
}
print STDERR " $elem->[1]\n";
}
}
' "$topic" "$not_in_next" "$not_in_master"
exit 1
fi
<<\DOC_END
This sample hook safeguards topic branches that have been
published from being rewound.
The workflow assumed here is:
* Once a topic branch forks from "master", "master" is never
merged into it again (either directly or indirectly).
* Once a topic branch is fully cooked and merged into "master",
it is deleted. If you need to build on top of it to correct
earlier mistakes, a new topic branch is created by forking at
the tip of the "master". This is not strictly necessary, but
it makes it easier to keep your history simple.
* Whenever you need to test or publish your changes to topic
branches, merge them into "next" branch.
The script, being an example, hardcodes the publish branch name
to be "next", but it is trivial to make it configurable via
$GIT_DIR/config mechanism.
With this workflow, you would want to know:
(1) ... if a topic branch has ever been merged to "next". Young
topic branches can have stupid mistakes you would rather
clean up before publishing, and things that have not been
merged into other branches can be easily rebased without
affecting other people. But once it is published, you would
not want to rewind it.
(2) ... if a topic branch has been fully merged to "master".
Then you can delete it. More importantly, you should not
build on top of it -- other people may already want to
change things related to the topic as patches against your
"master", so if you need further changes, it is better to
fork the topic (perhaps with the same name) afresh from the
tip of "master".
Let's look at this example:
o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o "next"
/ / / /
/ a---a---b A / /
/ / / /
/ / c---c---c---c B /
/ / / \ /
/ / / b---b C \ /
/ / / / \ /
---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o "master"
A, B and C are topic branches.
* A has one fix since it was merged up to "next".
* B has finished. It has been fully merged up to "master" and "next",
and is ready to be deleted.
* C has not merged to "next" at all.
We would want to allow C to be rebased, refuse A, and encourage
B to be deleted.
To compute (1):
git rev-list ^master ^topic next
git rev-list ^master next
if these match, topic has not merged in next at all.
To compute (2):
git rev-list master..topic
if this is empty, it is fully merged to "master".
DOC_END
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to make use of push options.
# The example simply echoes all push options that start with 'echoback='
# and rejects all pushes when the "reject" push option is used.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "pre-receive".
if test -n "$GIT_PUSH_OPTION_COUNT"
then
i=0
while test "$i" -lt "$GIT_PUSH_OPTION_COUNT"
do
eval "value=\$GIT_PUSH_OPTION_$i"
case "$value" in
echoback=*)
echo "echo from the pre-receive-hook: ${value#*=}" >&2
;;
reject)
exit 1
esac
i=$((i + 1))
done
fi
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to prepare the commit log message.
# Called by "git commit" with the name of the file that has the
# commit message, followed by the description of the commit
# message's source. The hook's purpose is to edit the commit
# message file. If the hook fails with a non-zero status,
# the commit is aborted.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "prepare-commit-msg".
# This hook includes three examples. The first one removes the
# "# Please enter the commit message..." help message.
#
# The second includes the output of "git diff --name-status -r"
# into the message, just before the "git status" output. It is
# commented because it doesn't cope with --amend or with squashed
# commits.
#
# The third example adds a Signed-off-by line to the message, that can
# still be edited. This is rarely a good idea.
COMMIT_MSG_FILE=$1
COMMIT_SOURCE=$2
SHA1=$3
/usr/bin/perl -i.bak -ne 'print unless(m/^. Please enter the commit message/..m/^#$/)' "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE"
# case "$COMMIT_SOURCE,$SHA1" in
# ,|template,)
# /usr/bin/perl -i.bak -pe '
# print "\n" . `git diff --cached --name-status -r`
# if /^#/ && $first++ == 0' "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE" ;;
# *) ;;
# esac
# SOB=$(git var GIT_COMMITTER_IDENT | sed -n 's/^\(.*>\).*$/Signed-off-by: \1/p')
# git interpret-trailers --in-place --trailer "$SOB" "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE"
# if test -z "$COMMIT_SOURCE"
# then
# /usr/bin/perl -i.bak -pe 'print "\n" if !$first_line++' "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE"
# fi
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to block unannotated tags from entering.
# Called by "git receive-pack" with arguments: refname sha1-old sha1-new
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "update".
#
# Config
# ------
# hooks.allowunannotated
# This boolean sets whether unannotated tags will be allowed into the
# repository. By default they won't be.
# hooks.allowdeletetag
# This boolean sets whether deleting tags will be allowed in the
# repository. By default they won't be.
# hooks.allowmodifytag
# This boolean sets whether a tag may be modified after creation. By default
# it won't be.
# hooks.allowdeletebranch
# This boolean sets whether deleting branches will be allowed in the
# repository. By default they won't be.
# hooks.denycreatebranch
# This boolean sets whether remotely creating branches will be denied
# in the repository. By default this is allowed.
#
# --- Command line
refname="$1"
oldrev="$2"
newrev="$3"
# --- Safety check
if [ -z "$GIT_DIR" ]; then
echo "Don't run this script from the command line." >&2
echo " (if you want, you could supply GIT_DIR then run" >&2
echo " $0 <ref> <oldrev> <newrev>)" >&2
exit 1
fi
if [ -z "$refname" -o -z "$oldrev" -o -z "$newrev" ]; then
echo "usage: $0 <ref> <oldrev> <newrev>" >&2
exit 1
fi
# --- Config
allowunannotated=$(git config --bool hooks.allowunannotated)
allowdeletebranch=$(git config --bool hooks.allowdeletebranch)
denycreatebranch=$(git config --bool hooks.denycreatebranch)
allowdeletetag=$(git config --bool hooks.allowdeletetag)
allowmodifytag=$(git config --bool hooks.allowmodifytag)
# check for no description
projectdesc=$(sed -e '1q' "$GIT_DIR/description")
case "$projectdesc" in
"Unnamed repository"* | "")
echo "*** Project description file hasn't been set" >&2
exit 1
;;
esac
# --- Check types
# if $newrev is 0000...0000, it's a commit to delete a ref.
zero="0000000000000000000000000000000000000000"
if [ "$newrev" = "$zero" ]; then
newrev_type=delete
else
newrev_type=$(git cat-file -t $newrev)
fi
case "$refname","$newrev_type" in
refs/tags/*,commit)
# un-annotated tag
short_refname=${refname##refs/tags/}
if [ "$allowunannotated" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** The un-annotated tag, $short_refname, is not allowed in this repository" >&2
echo "*** Use 'git tag [ -a | -s ]' for tags you want to propagate." >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/tags/*,delete)
# delete tag
if [ "$allowdeletetag" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** Deleting a tag is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/tags/*,tag)
# annotated tag
if [ "$allowmodifytag" != "true" ] && git rev-parse $refname > /dev/null 2>&1
then
echo "*** Tag '$refname' already exists." >&2
echo "*** Modifying a tag is not allowed in this repository." >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/heads/*,commit)
# branch
if [ "$oldrev" = "$zero" -a "$denycreatebranch" = "true" ]; then
echo "*** Creating a branch is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/heads/*,delete)
# delete branch
if [ "$allowdeletebranch" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** Deleting a branch is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/remotes/*,commit)
# tracking branch
;;
refs/remotes/*,delete)
# delete tracking branch
if [ "$allowdeletebranch" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** Deleting a tracking branch is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
*)
# Anything else (is there anything else?)
echo "*** Update hook: unknown type of update to ref $refname of type $newrev_type" >&2
exit 1
;;
esac
# --- Finished
exit 0
# git ls-files --others --exclude-from=.git/info/exclude
# Lines that start with '#' are comments.
# For a project mostly in C, the following would be a good set of
# exclude patterns (uncomment them if you want to use them):
# *.[oa]
# *~
x-
0D=+Jx7A$6Yݰ{xf޼9xlaL\eBxF\Pۄpf%n҈ɠT):^ 2/&ts#B5u/R
$r{"gF1^>c2>
\ No newline at end of file
xn {)^9^l*ZE} c1!iҧ/c8 2cz'V!E"@Pյ e{RIQ#6 WQ+6&Ҙ;$$r+Dm[9ϥ|f5*D 3#(~Ó hbTpYK
!LEGOboA ; f&!vG̋13 DZ=)6 ه]
{]e3*k= ̅kms V9a+.VV3"*}O?06Jimʲ E<%6礥-UF;3n,qݒbIݐU ?umA?7
\ No newline at end of file
git2:https://github.com/golang/snappy
\ No newline at end of file
2e65f85255dbc3072edf28d6b5b8efc472979f5a '2e65f85255dbc3072edf28d6b5b8efc472979f5a' of https://github.com/golang/snappy
[core]
repositoryformatversion = 0
filemode = true
bare = true
ignorecase = true
precomposeunicode = true
[remote "origin"]
url = https://github.com/golang/snappy
fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/*
Unnamed repository; edit this file 'description' to name the repository.
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to check the commit log message taken by
# applypatch from an e-mail message.
#
# The hook should exit with non-zero status after issuing an
# appropriate message if it wants to stop the commit. The hook is
# allowed to edit the commit message file.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "applypatch-msg".
. git-sh-setup
commitmsg="$(git rev-parse --git-path hooks/commit-msg)"
test -x "$commitmsg" && exec "$commitmsg" ${1+"$@"}
:
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to check the commit log message.
# Called by "git commit" with one argument, the name of the file
# that has the commit message. The hook should exit with non-zero
# status after issuing an appropriate message if it wants to stop the
# commit. The hook is allowed to edit the commit message file.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "commit-msg".
# Uncomment the below to add a Signed-off-by line to the message.
# Doing this in a hook is a bad idea in general, but the prepare-commit-msg
# hook is more suited to it.
#
# SOB=$(git var GIT_AUTHOR_IDENT | sed -n 's/^\(.*>\).*$/Signed-off-by: \1/p')
# grep -qs "^$SOB" "$1" || echo "$SOB" >> "$1"
# This example catches duplicate Signed-off-by lines.
test "" = "$(grep '^Signed-off-by: ' "$1" |
sort | uniq -c | sed -e '/^[ ]*1[ ]/d')" || {
echo >&2 Duplicate Signed-off-by lines.
exit 1
}
#!/usr/bin/perl
use strict;
use warnings;
use IPC::Open2;
# An example hook script to integrate Watchman
# (https://facebook.github.io/watchman/) with git to speed up detecting
# new and modified files.
#
# The hook is passed a version (currently 1) and a time in nanoseconds
# formatted as a string and outputs to stdout all files that have been
# modified since the given time. Paths must be relative to the root of
# the working tree and separated by a single NUL.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "query-watchman" and set
# 'git config core.fsmonitor .git/hooks/query-watchman'
#
my ($version, $time) = @ARGV;
# Check the hook interface version
if ($version == 1) {
# convert nanoseconds to seconds
$time = int $time / 1000000000;
} else {
die "Unsupported query-fsmonitor hook version '$version'.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n";
}
my $git_work_tree;
if ($^O =~ 'msys' || $^O =~ 'cygwin') {
$git_work_tree = Win32::GetCwd();
$git_work_tree =~ tr/\\/\//;
} else {
require Cwd;
$git_work_tree = Cwd::cwd();
}
my $retry = 1;
launch_watchman();
sub launch_watchman {
my $pid = open2(\*CHLD_OUT, \*CHLD_IN, 'watchman -j --no-pretty')
or die "open2() failed: $!\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n";
# In the query expression below we're asking for names of files that
# changed since $time but were not transient (ie created after
# $time but no longer exist).
#
# To accomplish this, we're using the "since" generator to use the
# recency index to select candidate nodes and "fields" to limit the
# output to file names only. Then we're using the "expression" term to
# further constrain the results.
#
# The category of transient files that we want to ignore will have a
# creation clock (cclock) newer than $time_t value and will also not
# currently exist.
my $query = <<" END";
["query", "$git_work_tree", {
"since": $time,
"fields": ["name"],
"expression": ["not", ["allof", ["since", $time, "cclock"], ["not", "exists"]]]
}]
END
print CHLD_IN $query;
close CHLD_IN;
my $response = do {local $/; <CHLD_OUT>};
die "Watchman: command returned no output.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" if $response eq "";
die "Watchman: command returned invalid output: $response\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" unless $response =~ /^\{/;
my $json_pkg;
eval {
require JSON::XS;
$json_pkg = "JSON::XS";
1;
} or do {
require JSON::PP;
$json_pkg = "JSON::PP";
};
my $o = $json_pkg->new->utf8->decode($response);
if ($retry > 0 and $o->{error} and $o->{error} =~ m/unable to resolve root .* directory (.*) is not watched/) {
print STDERR "Adding '$git_work_tree' to watchman's watch list.\n";
$retry--;
qx/watchman watch "$git_work_tree"/;
die "Failed to make watchman watch '$git_work_tree'.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" if $? != 0;
# Watchman will always return all files on the first query so
# return the fast "everything is dirty" flag to git and do the
# Watchman query just to get it over with now so we won't pay
# the cost in git to look up each individual file.
print "/\0";
eval { launch_watchman() };
exit 0;
}
die "Watchman: $o->{error}.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" if $o->{error};
binmode STDOUT, ":utf8";
local $, = "\0";
print @{$o->{files}};
}
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to prepare a packed repository for use over
# dumb transports.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "post-update".
exec git update-server-info
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to verify what is about to be committed
# by applypatch from an e-mail message.
#
# The hook should exit with non-zero status after issuing an
# appropriate message if it wants to stop the commit.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "pre-applypatch".
. git-sh-setup
precommit="$(git rev-parse --git-path hooks/pre-commit)"
test -x "$precommit" && exec "$precommit" ${1+"$@"}
:
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to verify what is about to be committed.
# Called by "git commit" with no arguments. The hook should
# exit with non-zero status after issuing an appropriate message if
# it wants to stop the commit.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "pre-commit".
if git rev-parse --verify HEAD >/dev/null 2>&1
then
against=HEAD
else
# Initial commit: diff against an empty tree object
against=4b825dc642cb6eb9a060e54bf8d69288fbee4904
fi
# If you want to allow non-ASCII filenames set this variable to true.
allownonascii=$(git config --bool hooks.allownonascii)
# Redirect output to stderr.
exec 1>&2
# Cross platform projects tend to avoid non-ASCII filenames; prevent
# them from being added to the repository. We exploit the fact that the
# printable range starts at the space character and ends with tilde.
if [ "$allownonascii" != "true" ] &&
# Note that the use of brackets around a tr range is ok here, (it's
# even required, for portability to Solaris 10's /usr/bin/tr), since
# the square bracket bytes happen to fall in the designated range.
test $(git diff --cached --name-only --diff-filter=A -z $against |
LC_ALL=C tr -d '[ -~]\0' | wc -c) != 0
then
cat <<\EOF
Error: Attempt to add a non-ASCII file name.
This can cause problems if you want to work with people on other platforms.
To be portable it is advisable to rename the file.
If you know what you are doing you can disable this check using:
git config hooks.allownonascii true
EOF
exit 1
fi
# If there are whitespace errors, print the offending file names and fail.
exec git diff-index --check --cached $against --
#!/bin/sh
# An example hook script to verify what is about to be pushed. Called by "git
# push" after it has checked the remote status, but before anything has been
# pushed. If this script exits with a non-zero status nothing will be pushed.
#
# This hook is called with the following parameters:
#
# $1 -- Name of the remote to which the push is being done
# $2 -- URL to which the push is being done
#
# If pushing without using a named remote those arguments will be equal.
#
# Information about the commits which are being pushed is supplied as lines to
# the standard input in the form:
#
# <local ref> <local sha1> <remote ref> <remote sha1>
#
# This sample shows how to prevent push of commits where the log message starts
# with "WIP" (work in progress).
remote="$1"
url="$2"
z40=0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
while read local_ref local_sha remote_ref remote_sha
do
if [ "$local_sha" = $z40 ]
then
# Handle delete
:
else
if [ "$remote_sha" = $z40 ]
then
# New branch, examine all commits
range="$local_sha"
else
# Update to existing branch, examine new commits
range="$remote_sha..$local_sha"
fi
# Check for WIP commit
commit=`git rev-list -n 1 --grep '^WIP' "$range"`
if [ -n "$commit" ]
then
echo >&2 "Found WIP commit in $local_ref, not pushing"
exit 1
fi
fi
done
exit 0
#!/bin/sh
#
# Copyright (c) 2006, 2008 Junio C Hamano
#
# The "pre-rebase" hook is run just before "git rebase" starts doing
# its job, and can prevent the command from running by exiting with
# non-zero status.
#
# The hook is called with the following parameters:
#
# $1 -- the upstream the series was forked from.
# $2 -- the branch being rebased (or empty when rebasing the current branch).
#
# This sample shows how to prevent topic branches that are already
# merged to 'next' branch from getting rebased, because allowing it
# would result in rebasing already published history.
publish=next
basebranch="$1"
if test "$#" = 2
then
topic="refs/heads/$2"
else
topic=`git symbolic-ref HEAD` ||
exit 0 ;# we do not interrupt rebasing detached HEAD
fi
case "$topic" in
refs/heads/??/*)
;;
*)
exit 0 ;# we do not interrupt others.
;;
esac
# Now we are dealing with a topic branch being rebased
# on top of master. Is it OK to rebase it?
# Does the topic really exist?
git show-ref -q "$topic" || {
echo >&2 "No such branch $topic"
exit 1
}
# Is topic fully merged to master?
not_in_master=`git rev-list --pretty=oneline ^master "$topic"`
if test -z "$not_in_master"
then
echo >&2 "$topic is fully merged to master; better remove it."
exit 1 ;# we could allow it, but there is no point.
fi
# Is topic ever merged to next? If so you should not be rebasing it.
only_next_1=`git rev-list ^master "^$topic" ${publish} | sort`
only_next_2=`git rev-list ^master ${publish} | sort`
if test "$only_next_1" = "$only_next_2"
then
not_in_topic=`git rev-list "^$topic" master`
if test -z "$not_in_topic"
then
echo >&2 "$topic is already up to date with master"
exit 1 ;# we could allow it, but there is no point.
else
exit 0
fi
else
not_in_next=`git rev-list --pretty=oneline ^${publish} "$topic"`
/usr/bin/perl -e '
my $topic = $ARGV[0];
my $msg = "* $topic has commits already merged to public branch:\n";
my (%not_in_next) = map {
/^([0-9a-f]+) /;
($1 => 1);
} split(/\n/, $ARGV[1]);
for my $elem (map {
/^([0-9a-f]+) (.*)$/;
[$1 => $2];
} split(/\n/, $ARGV[2])) {
if (!exists $not_in_next{$elem->[0]}) {
if ($msg) {
print STDERR $msg;
undef $msg;
}
print STDERR " $elem->[1]\n";
}
}
' "$topic" "$not_in_next" "$not_in_master"
exit 1
fi
<<\DOC_END
This sample hook safeguards topic branches that have been
published from being rewound.
The workflow assumed here is:
* Once a topic branch forks from "master", "master" is never
merged into it again (either directly or indirectly).
* Once a topic branch is fully cooked and merged into "master",
it is deleted. If you need to build on top of it to correct
earlier mistakes, a new topic branch is created by forking at
the tip of the "master". This is not strictly necessary, but
it makes it easier to keep your history simple.
* Whenever you need to test or publish your changes to topic
branches, merge them into "next" branch.
The script, being an example, hardcodes the publish branch name
to be "next", but it is trivial to make it configurable via
$GIT_DIR/config mechanism.
With this workflow, you would want to know:
(1) ... if a topic branch has ever been merged to "next". Young
topic branches can have stupid mistakes you would rather
clean up before publishing, and things that have not been
merged into other branches can be easily rebased without
affecting other people. But once it is published, you would
not want to rewind it.
(2) ... if a topic branch has been fully merged to "master".
Then you can delete it. More importantly, you should not
build on top of it -- other people may already want to
change things related to the topic as patches against your
"master", so if you need further changes, it is better to
fork the topic (perhaps with the same name) afresh from the
tip of "master".
Let's look at this example:
o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o "next"
/ / / /
/ a---a---b A / /
/ / / /
/ / c---c---c---c B /
/ / / \ /
/ / / b---b C \ /
/ / / / \ /
---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o "master"
A, B and C are topic branches.
* A has one fix since it was merged up to "next".
* B has finished. It has been fully merged up to "master" and "next",
and is ready to be deleted.
* C has not merged to "next" at all.
We would want to allow C to be rebased, refuse A, and encourage
B to be deleted.
To compute (1):
git rev-list ^master ^topic next
git rev-list ^master next
if these match, topic has not merged in next at all.
To compute (2):
git rev-list master..topic
if this is empty, it is fully merged to "master".
DOC_END
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to make use of push options.
# The example simply echoes all push options that start with 'echoback='
# and rejects all pushes when the "reject" push option is used.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "pre-receive".
if test -n "$GIT_PUSH_OPTION_COUNT"
then
i=0
while test "$i" -lt "$GIT_PUSH_OPTION_COUNT"
do
eval "value=\$GIT_PUSH_OPTION_$i"
case "$value" in
echoback=*)
echo "echo from the pre-receive-hook: ${value#*=}" >&2
;;
reject)
exit 1
esac
i=$((i + 1))
done
fi
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to prepare the commit log message.
# Called by "git commit" with the name of the file that has the
# commit message, followed by the description of the commit
# message's source. The hook's purpose is to edit the commit
# message file. If the hook fails with a non-zero status,
# the commit is aborted.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "prepare-commit-msg".
# This hook includes three examples. The first one removes the
# "# Please enter the commit message..." help message.
#
# The second includes the output of "git diff --name-status -r"
# into the message, just before the "git status" output. It is
# commented because it doesn't cope with --amend or with squashed
# commits.
#
# The third example adds a Signed-off-by line to the message, that can
# still be edited. This is rarely a good idea.
COMMIT_MSG_FILE=$1
COMMIT_SOURCE=$2
SHA1=$3
/usr/bin/perl -i.bak -ne 'print unless(m/^. Please enter the commit message/..m/^#$/)' "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE"
# case "$COMMIT_SOURCE,$SHA1" in
# ,|template,)
# /usr/bin/perl -i.bak -pe '
# print "\n" . `git diff --cached --name-status -r`
# if /^#/ && $first++ == 0' "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE" ;;
# *) ;;
# esac
# SOB=$(git var GIT_COMMITTER_IDENT | sed -n 's/^\(.*>\).*$/Signed-off-by: \1/p')
# git interpret-trailers --in-place --trailer "$SOB" "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE"
# if test -z "$COMMIT_SOURCE"
# then
# /usr/bin/perl -i.bak -pe 'print "\n" if !$first_line++' "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE"
# fi
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to block unannotated tags from entering.
# Called by "git receive-pack" with arguments: refname sha1-old sha1-new
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "update".
#
# Config
# ------
# hooks.allowunannotated
# This boolean sets whether unannotated tags will be allowed into the
# repository. By default they won't be.
# hooks.allowdeletetag
# This boolean sets whether deleting tags will be allowed in the
# repository. By default they won't be.
# hooks.allowmodifytag
# This boolean sets whether a tag may be modified after creation. By default
# it won't be.
# hooks.allowdeletebranch
# This boolean sets whether deleting branches will be allowed in the
# repository. By default they won't be.
# hooks.denycreatebranch
# This boolean sets whether remotely creating branches will be denied
# in the repository. By default this is allowed.
#
# --- Command line
refname="$1"
oldrev="$2"
newrev="$3"
# --- Safety check
if [ -z "$GIT_DIR" ]; then
echo "Don't run this script from the command line." >&2
echo " (if you want, you could supply GIT_DIR then run" >&2
echo " $0 <ref> <oldrev> <newrev>)" >&2
exit 1
fi
if [ -z "$refname" -o -z "$oldrev" -o -z "$newrev" ]; then
echo "usage: $0 <ref> <oldrev> <newrev>" >&2
exit 1
fi
# --- Config
allowunannotated=$(git config --bool hooks.allowunannotated)
allowdeletebranch=$(git config --bool hooks.allowdeletebranch)
denycreatebranch=$(git config --bool hooks.denycreatebranch)
allowdeletetag=$(git config --bool hooks.allowdeletetag)
allowmodifytag=$(git config --bool hooks.allowmodifytag)
# check for no description
projectdesc=$(sed -e '1q' "$GIT_DIR/description")
case "$projectdesc" in
"Unnamed repository"* | "")
echo "*** Project description file hasn't been set" >&2
exit 1
;;
esac
# --- Check types
# if $newrev is 0000...0000, it's a commit to delete a ref.
zero="0000000000000000000000000000000000000000"
if [ "$newrev" = "$zero" ]; then
newrev_type=delete
else
newrev_type=$(git cat-file -t $newrev)
fi
case "$refname","$newrev_type" in
refs/tags/*,commit)
# un-annotated tag
short_refname=${refname##refs/tags/}
if [ "$allowunannotated" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** The un-annotated tag, $short_refname, is not allowed in this repository" >&2
echo "*** Use 'git tag [ -a | -s ]' for tags you want to propagate." >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/tags/*,delete)
# delete tag
if [ "$allowdeletetag" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** Deleting a tag is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/tags/*,tag)
# annotated tag
if [ "$allowmodifytag" != "true" ] && git rev-parse $refname > /dev/null 2>&1
then
echo "*** Tag '$refname' already exists." >&2
echo "*** Modifying a tag is not allowed in this repository." >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/heads/*,commit)
# branch
if [ "$oldrev" = "$zero" -a "$denycreatebranch" = "true" ]; then
echo "*** Creating a branch is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/heads/*,delete)
# delete branch
if [ "$allowdeletebranch" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** Deleting a branch is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/remotes/*,commit)
# tracking branch
;;
refs/remotes/*,delete)
# delete tracking branch
if [ "$allowdeletebranch" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** Deleting a tracking branch is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
*)
# Anything else (is there anything else?)
echo "*** Update hook: unknown type of update to ref $refname of type $newrev_type" >&2
exit 1
;;
esac
# --- Finished
exit 0
# git ls-files --others --exclude-from=.git/info/exclude
# Lines that start with '#' are comments.
# For a project mostly in C, the following would be a good set of
# exclude patterns (uncomment them if you want to use them):
# *.[oa]
# *~
xUN0 ҧ38Tڐ!u<۸MX$EOv(RNiy6DM]gZ QnP;ÖC՛^G'?rP7Pg,%qmٛtܭ?Nc IM5QZ|Fî,ǁ͓UR XeVX'Hљ 46y<I =Ď#xt% U|0ƿiK}$%dk8T>M/[VŖ\["}#Z/nsێafno\WSgr6"TI\ K[
\ No newline at end of file
xMO=O0eίxl hJ1R!$Pqq,_s*Hܻu:lƎ)yelaZ0c8ImXXDBHS"w^ <&C0l eu|BOPxjW@*xC(s2Єhc o{G,ңEsψA<xXZuJQ}9SbFPВ"Վ'8~Lb@U;Fs]XאduS␫_0r
\ No newline at end of file
ef4f7dc0b6f69bb0478d216f3491fa2508de2940 'ef4f7dc0b6f69bb0478d216f3491fa2508de2940' of https://github.com/db7/kazoo-go
[core]
repositoryformatversion = 0
filemode = true
bare = true
ignorecase = true
precomposeunicode = true
[remote "origin"]
url = https://github.com/db7/kazoo-go
fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/*
Unnamed repository; edit this file 'description' to name the repository.
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to check the commit log message taken by
# applypatch from an e-mail message.
#
# The hook should exit with non-zero status after issuing an
# appropriate message if it wants to stop the commit. The hook is
# allowed to edit the commit message file.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "applypatch-msg".
. git-sh-setup
commitmsg="$(git rev-parse --git-path hooks/commit-msg)"
test -x "$commitmsg" && exec "$commitmsg" ${1+"$@"}
:
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to check the commit log message.
# Called by "git commit" with one argument, the name of the file
# that has the commit message. The hook should exit with non-zero
# status after issuing an appropriate message if it wants to stop the
# commit. The hook is allowed to edit the commit message file.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "commit-msg".
# Uncomment the below to add a Signed-off-by line to the message.
# Doing this in a hook is a bad idea in general, but the prepare-commit-msg
# hook is more suited to it.
#
# SOB=$(git var GIT_AUTHOR_IDENT | sed -n 's/^\(.*>\).*$/Signed-off-by: \1/p')
# grep -qs "^$SOB" "$1" || echo "$SOB" >> "$1"
# This example catches duplicate Signed-off-by lines.
test "" = "$(grep '^Signed-off-by: ' "$1" |
sort | uniq -c | sed -e '/^[ ]*1[ ]/d')" || {
echo >&2 Duplicate Signed-off-by lines.
exit 1
}
#!/usr/bin/perl
use strict;
use warnings;
use IPC::Open2;
# An example hook script to integrate Watchman
# (https://facebook.github.io/watchman/) with git to speed up detecting
# new and modified files.
#
# The hook is passed a version (currently 1) and a time in nanoseconds
# formatted as a string and outputs to stdout all files that have been
# modified since the given time. Paths must be relative to the root of
# the working tree and separated by a single NUL.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "query-watchman" and set
# 'git config core.fsmonitor .git/hooks/query-watchman'
#
my ($version, $time) = @ARGV;
# Check the hook interface version
if ($version == 1) {
# convert nanoseconds to seconds
$time = int $time / 1000000000;
} else {
die "Unsupported query-fsmonitor hook version '$version'.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n";
}
my $git_work_tree;
if ($^O =~ 'msys' || $^O =~ 'cygwin') {
$git_work_tree = Win32::GetCwd();
$git_work_tree =~ tr/\\/\//;
} else {
require Cwd;
$git_work_tree = Cwd::cwd();
}
my $retry = 1;
launch_watchman();
sub launch_watchman {
my $pid = open2(\*CHLD_OUT, \*CHLD_IN, 'watchman -j --no-pretty')
or die "open2() failed: $!\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n";
# In the query expression below we're asking for names of files that
# changed since $time but were not transient (ie created after
# $time but no longer exist).
#
# To accomplish this, we're using the "since" generator to use the
# recency index to select candidate nodes and "fields" to limit the
# output to file names only. Then we're using the "expression" term to
# further constrain the results.
#
# The category of transient files that we want to ignore will have a
# creation clock (cclock) newer than $time_t value and will also not
# currently exist.
my $query = <<" END";
["query", "$git_work_tree", {
"since": $time,
"fields": ["name"],
"expression": ["not", ["allof", ["since", $time, "cclock"], ["not", "exists"]]]
}]
END
print CHLD_IN $query;
close CHLD_IN;
my $response = do {local $/; <CHLD_OUT>};
die "Watchman: command returned no output.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" if $response eq "";
die "Watchman: command returned invalid output: $response\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" unless $response =~ /^\{/;
my $json_pkg;
eval {
require JSON::XS;
$json_pkg = "JSON::XS";
1;
} or do {
require JSON::PP;
$json_pkg = "JSON::PP";
};
my $o = $json_pkg->new->utf8->decode($response);
if ($retry > 0 and $o->{error} and $o->{error} =~ m/unable to resolve root .* directory (.*) is not watched/) {
print STDERR "Adding '$git_work_tree' to watchman's watch list.\n";
$retry--;
qx/watchman watch "$git_work_tree"/;
die "Failed to make watchman watch '$git_work_tree'.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" if $? != 0;
# Watchman will always return all files on the first query so
# return the fast "everything is dirty" flag to git and do the
# Watchman query just to get it over with now so we won't pay
# the cost in git to look up each individual file.
print "/\0";
eval { launch_watchman() };
exit 0;
}
die "Watchman: $o->{error}.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" if $o->{error};
binmode STDOUT, ":utf8";
local $, = "\0";
print @{$o->{files}};
}
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to prepare a packed repository for use over
# dumb transports.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "post-update".
exec git update-server-info
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to verify what is about to be committed
# by applypatch from an e-mail message.
#
# The hook should exit with non-zero status after issuing an
# appropriate message if it wants to stop the commit.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "pre-applypatch".
. git-sh-setup
precommit="$(git rev-parse --git-path hooks/pre-commit)"
test -x "$precommit" && exec "$precommit" ${1+"$@"}
:
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to verify what is about to be committed.
# Called by "git commit" with no arguments. The hook should
# exit with non-zero status after issuing an appropriate message if
# it wants to stop the commit.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "pre-commit".
if git rev-parse --verify HEAD >/dev/null 2>&1
then
against=HEAD
else
# Initial commit: diff against an empty tree object
against=4b825dc642cb6eb9a060e54bf8d69288fbee4904
fi
# If you want to allow non-ASCII filenames set this variable to true.
allownonascii=$(git config --bool hooks.allownonascii)
# Redirect output to stderr.
exec 1>&2
# Cross platform projects tend to avoid non-ASCII filenames; prevent
# them from being added to the repository. We exploit the fact that the
# printable range starts at the space character and ends with tilde.
if [ "$allownonascii" != "true" ] &&
# Note that the use of brackets around a tr range is ok here, (it's
# even required, for portability to Solaris 10's /usr/bin/tr), since
# the square bracket bytes happen to fall in the designated range.
test $(git diff --cached --name-only --diff-filter=A -z $against |
LC_ALL=C tr -d '[ -~]\0' | wc -c) != 0
then
cat <<\EOF
Error: Attempt to add a non-ASCII file name.
This can cause problems if you want to work with people on other platforms.
To be portable it is advisable to rename the file.
If you know what you are doing you can disable this check using:
git config hooks.allownonascii true
EOF
exit 1
fi
# If there are whitespace errors, print the offending file names and fail.
exec git diff-index --check --cached $against --
#!/bin/sh
# An example hook script to verify what is about to be pushed. Called by "git
# push" after it has checked the remote status, but before anything has been
# pushed. If this script exits with a non-zero status nothing will be pushed.
#
# This hook is called with the following parameters:
#
# $1 -- Name of the remote to which the push is being done
# $2 -- URL to which the push is being done
#
# If pushing without using a named remote those arguments will be equal.
#
# Information about the commits which are being pushed is supplied as lines to
# the standard input in the form:
#
# <local ref> <local sha1> <remote ref> <remote sha1>
#
# This sample shows how to prevent push of commits where the log message starts
# with "WIP" (work in progress).
remote="$1"
url="$2"
z40=0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
while read local_ref local_sha remote_ref remote_sha
do
if [ "$local_sha" = $z40 ]
then
# Handle delete
:
else
if [ "$remote_sha" = $z40 ]
then
# New branch, examine all commits
range="$local_sha"
else
# Update to existing branch, examine new commits
range="$remote_sha..$local_sha"
fi
# Check for WIP commit
commit=`git rev-list -n 1 --grep '^WIP' "$range"`
if [ -n "$commit" ]
then
echo >&2 "Found WIP commit in $local_ref, not pushing"
exit 1
fi
fi
done
exit 0
#!/bin/sh
#
# Copyright (c) 2006, 2008 Junio C Hamano
#
# The "pre-rebase" hook is run just before "git rebase" starts doing
# its job, and can prevent the command from running by exiting with
# non-zero status.
#
# The hook is called with the following parameters:
#
# $1 -- the upstream the series was forked from.
# $2 -- the branch being rebased (or empty when rebasing the current branch).
#
# This sample shows how to prevent topic branches that are already
# merged to 'next' branch from getting rebased, because allowing it
# would result in rebasing already published history.
publish=next
basebranch="$1"
if test "$#" = 2
then
topic="refs/heads/$2"
else
topic=`git symbolic-ref HEAD` ||
exit 0 ;# we do not interrupt rebasing detached HEAD
fi
case "$topic" in
refs/heads/??/*)
;;
*)
exit 0 ;# we do not interrupt others.
;;
esac
# Now we are dealing with a topic branch being rebased
# on top of master. Is it OK to rebase it?
# Does the topic really exist?
git show-ref -q "$topic" || {
echo >&2 "No such branch $topic"
exit 1
}
# Is topic fully merged to master?
not_in_master=`git rev-list --pretty=oneline ^master "$topic"`
if test -z "$not_in_master"
then
echo >&2 "$topic is fully merged to master; better remove it."
exit 1 ;# we could allow it, but there is no point.
fi
# Is topic ever merged to next? If so you should not be rebasing it.
only_next_1=`git rev-list ^master "^$topic" ${publish} | sort`
only_next_2=`git rev-list ^master ${publish} | sort`
if test "$only_next_1" = "$only_next_2"
then
not_in_topic=`git rev-list "^$topic" master`
if test -z "$not_in_topic"
then
echo >&2 "$topic is already up to date with master"
exit 1 ;# we could allow it, but there is no point.
else
exit 0
fi
else
not_in_next=`git rev-list --pretty=oneline ^${publish} "$topic"`
/usr/bin/perl -e '
my $topic = $ARGV[0];
my $msg = "* $topic has commits already merged to public branch:\n";
my (%not_in_next) = map {
/^([0-9a-f]+) /;
($1 => 1);
} split(/\n/, $ARGV[1]);
for my $elem (map {
/^([0-9a-f]+) (.*)$/;
[$1 => $2];
} split(/\n/, $ARGV[2])) {
if (!exists $not_in_next{$elem->[0]}) {
if ($msg) {
print STDERR $msg;
undef $msg;
}
print STDERR " $elem->[1]\n";
}
}
' "$topic" "$not_in_next" "$not_in_master"
exit 1
fi
<<\DOC_END
This sample hook safeguards topic branches that have been
published from being rewound.
The workflow assumed here is:
* Once a topic branch forks from "master", "master" is never
merged into it again (either directly or indirectly).
* Once a topic branch is fully cooked and merged into "master",
it is deleted. If you need to build on top of it to correct
earlier mistakes, a new topic branch is created by forking at
the tip of the "master". This is not strictly necessary, but
it makes it easier to keep your history simple.
* Whenever you need to test or publish your changes to topic
branches, merge them into "next" branch.
The script, being an example, hardcodes the publish branch name
to be "next", but it is trivial to make it configurable via
$GIT_DIR/config mechanism.
With this workflow, you would want to know:
(1) ... if a topic branch has ever been merged to "next". Young
topic branches can have stupid mistakes you would rather
clean up before publishing, and things that have not been
merged into other branches can be easily rebased without
affecting other people. But once it is published, you would
not want to rewind it.
(2) ... if a topic branch has been fully merged to "master".
Then you can delete it. More importantly, you should not
build on top of it -- other people may already want to
change things related to the topic as patches against your
"master", so if you need further changes, it is better to
fork the topic (perhaps with the same name) afresh from the
tip of "master".
Let's look at this example:
o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o "next"
/ / / /
/ a---a---b A / /
/ / / /
/ / c---c---c---c B /
/ / / \ /
/ / / b---b C \ /
/ / / / \ /
---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o "master"
A, B and C are topic branches.
* A has one fix since it was merged up to "next".
* B has finished. It has been fully merged up to "master" and "next",
and is ready to be deleted.
* C has not merged to "next" at all.
We would want to allow C to be rebased, refuse A, and encourage
B to be deleted.
To compute (1):
git rev-list ^master ^topic next
git rev-list ^master next
if these match, topic has not merged in next at all.
To compute (2):
git rev-list master..topic
if this is empty, it is fully merged to "master".
DOC_END
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to make use of push options.
# The example simply echoes all push options that start with 'echoback='
# and rejects all pushes when the "reject" push option is used.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "pre-receive".
if test -n "$GIT_PUSH_OPTION_COUNT"
then
i=0
while test "$i" -lt "$GIT_PUSH_OPTION_COUNT"
do
eval "value=\$GIT_PUSH_OPTION_$i"
case "$value" in
echoback=*)
echo "echo from the pre-receive-hook: ${value#*=}" >&2
;;
reject)
exit 1
esac
i=$((i + 1))
done
fi
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to prepare the commit log message.
# Called by "git commit" with the name of the file that has the
# commit message, followed by the description of the commit
# message's source. The hook's purpose is to edit the commit
# message file. If the hook fails with a non-zero status,
# the commit is aborted.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "prepare-commit-msg".
# This hook includes three examples. The first one removes the
# "# Please enter the commit message..." help message.
#
# The second includes the output of "git diff --name-status -r"
# into the message, just before the "git status" output. It is
# commented because it doesn't cope with --amend or with squashed
# commits.
#
# The third example adds a Signed-off-by line to the message, that can
# still be edited. This is rarely a good idea.
COMMIT_MSG_FILE=$1
COMMIT_SOURCE=$2
SHA1=$3
/usr/bin/perl -i.bak -ne 'print unless(m/^. Please enter the commit message/..m/^#$/)' "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE"
# case "$COMMIT_SOURCE,$SHA1" in
# ,|template,)
# /usr/bin/perl -i.bak -pe '
# print "\n" . `git diff --cached --name-status -r`
# if /^#/ && $first++ == 0' "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE" ;;
# *) ;;
# esac
# SOB=$(git var GIT_COMMITTER_IDENT | sed -n 's/^\(.*>\).*$/Signed-off-by: \1/p')
# git interpret-trailers --in-place --trailer "$SOB" "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE"
# if test -z "$COMMIT_SOURCE"
# then
# /usr/bin/perl -i.bak -pe 'print "\n" if !$first_line++' "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE"
# fi
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to block unannotated tags from entering.
# Called by "git receive-pack" with arguments: refname sha1-old sha1-new
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "update".
#
# Config
# ------
# hooks.allowunannotated
# This boolean sets whether unannotated tags will be allowed into the
# repository. By default they won't be.
# hooks.allowdeletetag
# This boolean sets whether deleting tags will be allowed in the
# repository. By default they won't be.
# hooks.allowmodifytag
# This boolean sets whether a tag may be modified after creation. By default
# it won't be.
# hooks.allowdeletebranch
# This boolean sets whether deleting branches will be allowed in the
# repository. By default they won't be.
# hooks.denycreatebranch
# This boolean sets whether remotely creating branches will be denied
# in the repository. By default this is allowed.
#
# --- Command line
refname="$1"
oldrev="$2"
newrev="$3"
# --- Safety check
if [ -z "$GIT_DIR" ]; then
echo "Don't run this script from the command line." >&2
echo " (if you want, you could supply GIT_DIR then run" >&2
echo " $0 <ref> <oldrev> <newrev>)" >&2
exit 1
fi
if [ -z "$refname" -o -z "$oldrev" -o -z "$newrev" ]; then
echo "usage: $0 <ref> <oldrev> <newrev>" >&2
exit 1
fi
# --- Config
allowunannotated=$(git config --bool hooks.allowunannotated)
allowdeletebranch=$(git config --bool hooks.allowdeletebranch)
denycreatebranch=$(git config --bool hooks.denycreatebranch)
allowdeletetag=$(git config --bool hooks.allowdeletetag)
allowmodifytag=$(git config --bool hooks.allowmodifytag)
# check for no description
projectdesc=$(sed -e '1q' "$GIT_DIR/description")
case "$projectdesc" in
"Unnamed repository"* | "")
echo "*** Project description file hasn't been set" >&2
exit 1
;;
esac
# --- Check types
# if $newrev is 0000...0000, it's a commit to delete a ref.
zero="0000000000000000000000000000000000000000"
if [ "$newrev" = "$zero" ]; then
newrev_type=delete
else
newrev_type=$(git cat-file -t $newrev)
fi
case "$refname","$newrev_type" in
refs/tags/*,commit)
# un-annotated tag
short_refname=${refname##refs/tags/}
if [ "$allowunannotated" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** The un-annotated tag, $short_refname, is not allowed in this repository" >&2
echo "*** Use 'git tag [ -a | -s ]' for tags you want to propagate." >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/tags/*,delete)
# delete tag
if [ "$allowdeletetag" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** Deleting a tag is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/tags/*,tag)
# annotated tag
if [ "$allowmodifytag" != "true" ] && git rev-parse $refname > /dev/null 2>&1
then
echo "*** Tag '$refname' already exists." >&2
echo "*** Modifying a tag is not allowed in this repository." >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/heads/*,commit)
# branch
if [ "$oldrev" = "$zero" -a "$denycreatebranch" = "true" ]; then
echo "*** Creating a branch is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/heads/*,delete)
# delete branch
if [ "$allowdeletebranch" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** Deleting a branch is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/remotes/*,commit)
# tracking branch
;;
refs/remotes/*,delete)
# delete tracking branch
if [ "$allowdeletebranch" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** Deleting a tracking branch is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
*)
# Anything else (is there anything else?)
echo "*** Update hook: unknown type of update to ref $refname of type $newrev_type" >&2
exit 1
;;
esac
# --- Finished
exit 0
# git ls-files --others --exclude-from=.git/info/exclude
# Lines that start with '#' are comments.
# For a project mostly in C, the following would be a good set of
# exclude patterns (uncomment them if you want to use them):
# *.[oa]
# *~
git2:https://github.com/bsm/sarama-cluster
\ No newline at end of file
c618e605e15c0d7535f6c96ff8efbb0dba4fd66c tag 'v2.1.15' of https://github.com/bsm/sarama-cluster
[core]
repositoryformatversion = 0
filemode = true
bare = true
ignorecase = true
precomposeunicode = true
[remote "origin"]
url = https://github.com/bsm/sarama-cluster
fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/*
Unnamed repository; edit this file 'description' to name the repository.
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to check the commit log message taken by
# applypatch from an e-mail message.
#
# The hook should exit with non-zero status after issuing an
# appropriate message if it wants to stop the commit. The hook is
# allowed to edit the commit message file.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "applypatch-msg".
. git-sh-setup
commitmsg="$(git rev-parse --git-path hooks/commit-msg)"
test -x "$commitmsg" && exec "$commitmsg" ${1+"$@"}
:
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to check the commit log message.
# Called by "git commit" with one argument, the name of the file
# that has the commit message. The hook should exit with non-zero
# status after issuing an appropriate message if it wants to stop the
# commit. The hook is allowed to edit the commit message file.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "commit-msg".
# Uncomment the below to add a Signed-off-by line to the message.
# Doing this in a hook is a bad idea in general, but the prepare-commit-msg
# hook is more suited to it.
#
# SOB=$(git var GIT_AUTHOR_IDENT | sed -n 's/^\(.*>\).*$/Signed-off-by: \1/p')
# grep -qs "^$SOB" "$1" || echo "$SOB" >> "$1"
# This example catches duplicate Signed-off-by lines.
test "" = "$(grep '^Signed-off-by: ' "$1" |
sort | uniq -c | sed -e '/^[ ]*1[ ]/d')" || {
echo >&2 Duplicate Signed-off-by lines.
exit 1
}
#!/usr/bin/perl
use strict;
use warnings;
use IPC::Open2;
# An example hook script to integrate Watchman
# (https://facebook.github.io/watchman/) with git to speed up detecting
# new and modified files.
#
# The hook is passed a version (currently 1) and a time in nanoseconds
# formatted as a string and outputs to stdout all files that have been
# modified since the given time. Paths must be relative to the root of
# the working tree and separated by a single NUL.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "query-watchman" and set
# 'git config core.fsmonitor .git/hooks/query-watchman'
#
my ($version, $time) = @ARGV;
# Check the hook interface version
if ($version == 1) {
# convert nanoseconds to seconds
$time = int $time / 1000000000;
} else {
die "Unsupported query-fsmonitor hook version '$version'.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n";
}
my $git_work_tree;
if ($^O =~ 'msys' || $^O =~ 'cygwin') {
$git_work_tree = Win32::GetCwd();
$git_work_tree =~ tr/\\/\//;
} else {
require Cwd;
$git_work_tree = Cwd::cwd();
}
my $retry = 1;
launch_watchman();
sub launch_watchman {
my $pid = open2(\*CHLD_OUT, \*CHLD_IN, 'watchman -j --no-pretty')
or die "open2() failed: $!\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n";
# In the query expression below we're asking for names of files that
# changed since $time but were not transient (ie created after
# $time but no longer exist).
#
# To accomplish this, we're using the "since" generator to use the
# recency index to select candidate nodes and "fields" to limit the
# output to file names only. Then we're using the "expression" term to
# further constrain the results.
#
# The category of transient files that we want to ignore will have a
# creation clock (cclock) newer than $time_t value and will also not
# currently exist.
my $query = <<" END";
["query", "$git_work_tree", {
"since": $time,
"fields": ["name"],
"expression": ["not", ["allof", ["since", $time, "cclock"], ["not", "exists"]]]
}]
END
print CHLD_IN $query;
close CHLD_IN;
my $response = do {local $/; <CHLD_OUT>};
die "Watchman: command returned no output.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" if $response eq "";
die "Watchman: command returned invalid output: $response\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" unless $response =~ /^\{/;
my $json_pkg;
eval {
require JSON::XS;
$json_pkg = "JSON::XS";
1;
} or do {
require JSON::PP;
$json_pkg = "JSON::PP";
};
my $o = $json_pkg->new->utf8->decode($response);
if ($retry > 0 and $o->{error} and $o->{error} =~ m/unable to resolve root .* directory (.*) is not watched/) {
print STDERR "Adding '$git_work_tree' to watchman's watch list.\n";
$retry--;
qx/watchman watch "$git_work_tree"/;
die "Failed to make watchman watch '$git_work_tree'.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" if $? != 0;
# Watchman will always return all files on the first query so
# return the fast "everything is dirty" flag to git and do the
# Watchman query just to get it over with now so we won't pay
# the cost in git to look up each individual file.
print "/\0";
eval { launch_watchman() };
exit 0;
}
die "Watchman: $o->{error}.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" if $o->{error};
binmode STDOUT, ":utf8";
local $, = "\0";
print @{$o->{files}};
}
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to prepare a packed repository for use over
# dumb transports.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "post-update".
exec git update-server-info
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to verify what is about to be committed
# by applypatch from an e-mail message.
#
# The hook should exit with non-zero status after issuing an
# appropriate message if it wants to stop the commit.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "pre-applypatch".
. git-sh-setup
precommit="$(git rev-parse --git-path hooks/pre-commit)"
test -x "$precommit" && exec "$precommit" ${1+"$@"}
:
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to verify what is about to be committed.
# Called by "git commit" with no arguments. The hook should
# exit with non-zero status after issuing an appropriate message if
# it wants to stop the commit.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "pre-commit".
if git rev-parse --verify HEAD >/dev/null 2>&1
then
against=HEAD
else
# Initial commit: diff against an empty tree object
against=4b825dc642cb6eb9a060e54bf8d69288fbee4904
fi
# If you want to allow non-ASCII filenames set this variable to true.
allownonascii=$(git config --bool hooks.allownonascii)
# Redirect output to stderr.
exec 1>&2
# Cross platform projects tend to avoid non-ASCII filenames; prevent
# them from being added to the repository. We exploit the fact that the
# printable range starts at the space character and ends with tilde.
if [ "$allownonascii" != "true" ] &&
# Note that the use of brackets around a tr range is ok here, (it's
# even required, for portability to Solaris 10's /usr/bin/tr), since
# the square bracket bytes happen to fall in the designated range.
test $(git diff --cached --name-only --diff-filter=A -z $against |
LC_ALL=C tr -d '[ -~]\0' | wc -c) != 0
then
cat <<\EOF
Error: Attempt to add a non-ASCII file name.
This can cause problems if you want to work with people on other platforms.
To be portable it is advisable to rename the file.
If you know what you are doing you can disable this check using:
git config hooks.allownonascii true
EOF
exit 1
fi
# If there are whitespace errors, print the offending file names and fail.
exec git diff-index --check --cached $against --
#!/bin/sh
# An example hook script to verify what is about to be pushed. Called by "git
# push" after it has checked the remote status, but before anything has been
# pushed. If this script exits with a non-zero status nothing will be pushed.
#
# This hook is called with the following parameters:
#
# $1 -- Name of the remote to which the push is being done
# $2 -- URL to which the push is being done
#
# If pushing without using a named remote those arguments will be equal.
#
# Information about the commits which are being pushed is supplied as lines to
# the standard input in the form:
#
# <local ref> <local sha1> <remote ref> <remote sha1>
#
# This sample shows how to prevent push of commits where the log message starts
# with "WIP" (work in progress).
remote="$1"
url="$2"
z40=0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
while read local_ref local_sha remote_ref remote_sha
do
if [ "$local_sha" = $z40 ]
then
# Handle delete
:
else
if [ "$remote_sha" = $z40 ]
then
# New branch, examine all commits
range="$local_sha"
else
# Update to existing branch, examine new commits
range="$remote_sha..$local_sha"
fi
# Check for WIP commit
commit=`git rev-list -n 1 --grep '^WIP' "$range"`
if [ -n "$commit" ]
then
echo >&2 "Found WIP commit in $local_ref, not pushing"
exit 1
fi
fi
done
exit 0
#!/bin/sh
#
# Copyright (c) 2006, 2008 Junio C Hamano
#
# The "pre-rebase" hook is run just before "git rebase" starts doing
# its job, and can prevent the command from running by exiting with
# non-zero status.
#
# The hook is called with the following parameters:
#
# $1 -- the upstream the series was forked from.
# $2 -- the branch being rebased (or empty when rebasing the current branch).
#
# This sample shows how to prevent topic branches that are already
# merged to 'next' branch from getting rebased, because allowing it
# would result in rebasing already published history.
publish=next
basebranch="$1"
if test "$#" = 2
then
topic="refs/heads/$2"
else
topic=`git symbolic-ref HEAD` ||
exit 0 ;# we do not interrupt rebasing detached HEAD
fi
case "$topic" in
refs/heads/??/*)
;;
*)
exit 0 ;# we do not interrupt others.
;;
esac
# Now we are dealing with a topic branch being rebased
# on top of master. Is it OK to rebase it?
# Does the topic really exist?
git show-ref -q "$topic" || {
echo >&2 "No such branch $topic"
exit 1
}
# Is topic fully merged to master?
not_in_master=`git rev-list --pretty=oneline ^master "$topic"`
if test -z "$not_in_master"
then
echo >&2 "$topic is fully merged to master; better remove it."
exit 1 ;# we could allow it, but there is no point.
fi
# Is topic ever merged to next? If so you should not be rebasing it.
only_next_1=`git rev-list ^master "^$topic" ${publish} | sort`
only_next_2=`git rev-list ^master ${publish} | sort`
if test "$only_next_1" = "$only_next_2"
then
not_in_topic=`git rev-list "^$topic" master`
if test -z "$not_in_topic"
then
echo >&2 "$topic is already up to date with master"
exit 1 ;# we could allow it, but there is no point.
else
exit 0
fi
else
not_in_next=`git rev-list --pretty=oneline ^${publish} "$topic"`
/usr/bin/perl -e '
my $topic = $ARGV[0];
my $msg = "* $topic has commits already merged to public branch:\n";
my (%not_in_next) = map {
/^([0-9a-f]+) /;
($1 => 1);
} split(/\n/, $ARGV[1]);
for my $elem (map {
/^([0-9a-f]+) (.*)$/;
[$1 => $2];
} split(/\n/, $ARGV[2])) {
if (!exists $not_in_next{$elem->[0]}) {
if ($msg) {
print STDERR $msg;
undef $msg;
}
print STDERR " $elem->[1]\n";
}
}
' "$topic" "$not_in_next" "$not_in_master"
exit 1
fi
<<\DOC_END
This sample hook safeguards topic branches that have been
published from being rewound.
The workflow assumed here is:
* Once a topic branch forks from "master", "master" is never
merged into it again (either directly or indirectly).
* Once a topic branch is fully cooked and merged into "master",
it is deleted. If you need to build on top of it to correct
earlier mistakes, a new topic branch is created by forking at
the tip of the "master". This is not strictly necessary, but
it makes it easier to keep your history simple.
* Whenever you need to test or publish your changes to topic
branches, merge them into "next" branch.
The script, being an example, hardcodes the publish branch name
to be "next", but it is trivial to make it configurable via
$GIT_DIR/config mechanism.
With this workflow, you would want to know:
(1) ... if a topic branch has ever been merged to "next". Young
topic branches can have stupid mistakes you would rather
clean up before publishing, and things that have not been
merged into other branches can be easily rebased without
affecting other people. But once it is published, you would
not want to rewind it.
(2) ... if a topic branch has been fully merged to "master".
Then you can delete it. More importantly, you should not
build on top of it -- other people may already want to
change things related to the topic as patches against your
"master", so if you need further changes, it is better to
fork the topic (perhaps with the same name) afresh from the
tip of "master".
Let's look at this example:
o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o "next"
/ / / /
/ a---a---b A / /
/ / / /
/ / c---c---c---c B /
/ / / \ /
/ / / b---b C \ /
/ / / / \ /
---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o "master"
A, B and C are topic branches.
* A has one fix since it was merged up to "next".
* B has finished. It has been fully merged up to "master" and "next",
and is ready to be deleted.
* C has not merged to "next" at all.
We would want to allow C to be rebased, refuse A, and encourage
B to be deleted.
To compute (1):
git rev-list ^master ^topic next
git rev-list ^master next
if these match, topic has not merged in next at all.
To compute (2):
git rev-list master..topic
if this is empty, it is fully merged to "master".
DOC_END
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to make use of push options.
# The example simply echoes all push options that start with 'echoback='
# and rejects all pushes when the "reject" push option is used.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "pre-receive".
if test -n "$GIT_PUSH_OPTION_COUNT"
then
i=0
while test "$i" -lt "$GIT_PUSH_OPTION_COUNT"
do
eval "value=\$GIT_PUSH_OPTION_$i"
case "$value" in
echoback=*)
echo "echo from the pre-receive-hook: ${value#*=}" >&2
;;
reject)
exit 1
esac
i=$((i + 1))
done
fi
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to prepare the commit log message.
# Called by "git commit" with the name of the file that has the
# commit message, followed by the description of the commit
# message's source. The hook's purpose is to edit the commit
# message file. If the hook fails with a non-zero status,
# the commit is aborted.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "prepare-commit-msg".
# This hook includes three examples. The first one removes the
# "# Please enter the commit message..." help message.
#
# The second includes the output of "git diff --name-status -r"
# into the message, just before the "git status" output. It is
# commented because it doesn't cope with --amend or with squashed
# commits.
#
# The third example adds a Signed-off-by line to the message, that can
# still be edited. This is rarely a good idea.
COMMIT_MSG_FILE=$1
COMMIT_SOURCE=$2
SHA1=$3
/usr/bin/perl -i.bak -ne 'print unless(m/^. Please enter the commit message/..m/^#$/)' "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE"
# case "$COMMIT_SOURCE,$SHA1" in
# ,|template,)
# /usr/bin/perl -i.bak -pe '
# print "\n" . `git diff --cached --name-status -r`
# if /^#/ && $first++ == 0' "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE" ;;
# *) ;;
# esac
# SOB=$(git var GIT_COMMITTER_IDENT | sed -n 's/^\(.*>\).*$/Signed-off-by: \1/p')
# git interpret-trailers --in-place --trailer "$SOB" "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE"
# if test -z "$COMMIT_SOURCE"
# then
# /usr/bin/perl -i.bak -pe 'print "\n" if !$first_line++' "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE"
# fi
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to block unannotated tags from entering.
# Called by "git receive-pack" with arguments: refname sha1-old sha1-new
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "update".
#
# Config
# ------
# hooks.allowunannotated
# This boolean sets whether unannotated tags will be allowed into the
# repository. By default they won't be.
# hooks.allowdeletetag
# This boolean sets whether deleting tags will be allowed in the
# repository. By default they won't be.
# hooks.allowmodifytag
# This boolean sets whether a tag may be modified after creation. By default
# it won't be.
# hooks.allowdeletebranch
# This boolean sets whether deleting branches will be allowed in the
# repository. By default they won't be.
# hooks.denycreatebranch
# This boolean sets whether remotely creating branches will be denied
# in the repository. By default this is allowed.
#
# --- Command line
refname="$1"
oldrev="$2"
newrev="$3"
# --- Safety check
if [ -z "$GIT_DIR" ]; then
echo "Don't run this script from the command line." >&2
echo " (if you want, you could supply GIT_DIR then run" >&2
echo " $0 <ref> <oldrev> <newrev>)" >&2
exit 1
fi
if [ -z "$refname" -o -z "$oldrev" -o -z "$newrev" ]; then
echo "usage: $0 <ref> <oldrev> <newrev>" >&2
exit 1
fi
# --- Config
allowunannotated=$(git config --bool hooks.allowunannotated)
allowdeletebranch=$(git config --bool hooks.allowdeletebranch)
denycreatebranch=$(git config --bool hooks.denycreatebranch)
allowdeletetag=$(git config --bool hooks.allowdeletetag)
allowmodifytag=$(git config --bool hooks.allowmodifytag)
# check for no description
projectdesc=$(sed -e '1q' "$GIT_DIR/description")
case "$projectdesc" in
"Unnamed repository"* | "")
echo "*** Project description file hasn't been set" >&2
exit 1
;;
esac
# --- Check types
# if $newrev is 0000...0000, it's a commit to delete a ref.
zero="0000000000000000000000000000000000000000"
if [ "$newrev" = "$zero" ]; then
newrev_type=delete
else
newrev_type=$(git cat-file -t $newrev)
fi
case "$refname","$newrev_type" in
refs/tags/*,commit)
# un-annotated tag
short_refname=${refname##refs/tags/}
if [ "$allowunannotated" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** The un-annotated tag, $short_refname, is not allowed in this repository" >&2
echo "*** Use 'git tag [ -a | -s ]' for tags you want to propagate." >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/tags/*,delete)
# delete tag
if [ "$allowdeletetag" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** Deleting a tag is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/tags/*,tag)
# annotated tag
if [ "$allowmodifytag" != "true" ] && git rev-parse $refname > /dev/null 2>&1
then
echo "*** Tag '$refname' already exists." >&2
echo "*** Modifying a tag is not allowed in this repository." >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/heads/*,commit)
# branch
if [ "$oldrev" = "$zero" -a "$denycreatebranch" = "true" ]; then
echo "*** Creating a branch is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/heads/*,delete)
# delete branch
if [ "$allowdeletebranch" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** Deleting a branch is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/remotes/*,commit)
# tracking branch
;;
refs/remotes/*,delete)
# delete tracking branch
if [ "$allowdeletebranch" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** Deleting a tracking branch is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
*)
# Anything else (is there anything else?)
echo "*** Update hook: unknown type of update to ref $refname of type $newrev_type" >&2
exit 1
;;
esac
# --- Finished
exit 0
# git ls-files --others --exclude-from=.git/info/exclude
# Lines that start with '#' are comments.
# For a project mostly in C, the following would be a good set of
# exclude patterns (uncomment them if you want to use them):
# *.[oa]
# *~
x]r S!M\3F"f ̤}Oj'GH+Fag%"ncׄE@~
^"œԧjGDzE ,lLqji8?@D0 &R6.b1# v91C+j "[:ESEP+8t!"cIP.mU^|2QmkC/^vT&cJϸUSY9Ju%`l=R.4dLBNiZDܜP0b9k@
\ No newline at end of file
xj0 wS-C(+ Vu(ue?')8$<wp{Wl#Hcp5X8nF}_ۇ!&~:G dק)Cxv,\y@!˪?lۗX+]þG*iqZ`ԏie3#f QLrBCgW`Ds.ZPBԓ<e$>Mf
\ No newline at end of file
xVN0O!c 1H5JtnL`]5dΈ F1$So9:cQ @qH1&%aIUIPp |MLOyLHBƁ^y^VdH+KCdQ#0F':xnKx*m`Fsd(рK:ϑboiLy%OBfY2sDFWeG'uɩbIz[_x/8U
4`AcQ45dreZHޚbu F#UފfBΛpW_vY1]'?AyvoF),uh|]5)p~PҺJl1663%_.p*R+g*@
\ No newline at end of file
x]R[o0ٿu!!on9.!K0sC U|.lO?S WVNd><>}P?5NԐRO'㜱#t
ǩ8LZ=@Q'-+p66)äك DAmMxv>>̠^EuXGN4Zb|ogv~2mHp.hs2WspAAЙvuu>! q҅bL4 > `PwW]A 5ӿN0<Hbdn}@ v ZCʱ3BV:zyƸU-רbty<v||@5X x,e Z[8!P{(V@r%}/%*($Ms%Eo3.a{'@x VddFd9WV\BP
%ۜJ(,*
.VY؆ @ojM<R-Q_Z{ɟ
E1,.*˜]Ğ92A8vU[XB>TBLB(τBXT*‡8q#d&ž`uPM.#!-~Ӓ1#Gm[
\ No newline at end of file
xRj0kfJ<j)cl&kK:acOETXw{YI{=GR_>+/Ǣ(o)9Yfߖo3:gcu~SбӃ0
R)46cfxn%e=㍤Աhw ʆկ#eN0PdJmRPkP4o!V> mBB|`!xK;})"T2ޒ`ԇwd?ȱ }jMe/16ZmF#ayAA` S<bͿ/ _}|I{q9?%Ʉ/891
"[]†,xy%do'zV Ό]I1ޱZ"n:\l}< @
\ No newline at end of file
x=0i_1X9(؊E)V44Ad-;tGtB*yygYtz2M8(1M9H^?Iw}>^*ǭ̰"'3o/}VOV@|7Zf3l6V ovWake"LܶČ`2گAܶ:㹃gR$SMzE
rK`2zR{_h tJNuLqAF8܋)cwjtLRc)*^uv]dGHB9f.jYhV#7*@`v<ͫj8$M~>kR鳏xO DŽ%-_R2 sR&O9{pq}V{!R>N140RF"I3 2zLr}ZeYxcSzMܥPk,iS{@^3U
\ No newline at end of file
git2:https://github.com/gomodule/redigo
\ No newline at end of file
9c11da706d9b7902c6da69c592f75637793fe121 tag 'v2.0.0' of https://github.com/gomodule/redigo
[core]
repositoryformatversion = 0
filemode = true
bare = true
ignorecase = true
precomposeunicode = true
[remote "origin"]
url = https://github.com/gomodule/redigo
fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/*
Unnamed repository; edit this file 'description' to name the repository.
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to check the commit log message taken by
# applypatch from an e-mail message.
#
# The hook should exit with non-zero status after issuing an
# appropriate message if it wants to stop the commit. The hook is
# allowed to edit the commit message file.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "applypatch-msg".
. git-sh-setup
commitmsg="$(git rev-parse --git-path hooks/commit-msg)"
test -x "$commitmsg" && exec "$commitmsg" ${1+"$@"}
:
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to check the commit log message.
# Called by "git commit" with one argument, the name of the file
# that has the commit message. The hook should exit with non-zero
# status after issuing an appropriate message if it wants to stop the
# commit. The hook is allowed to edit the commit message file.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "commit-msg".
# Uncomment the below to add a Signed-off-by line to the message.
# Doing this in a hook is a bad idea in general, but the prepare-commit-msg
# hook is more suited to it.
#
# SOB=$(git var GIT_AUTHOR_IDENT | sed -n 's/^\(.*>\).*$/Signed-off-by: \1/p')
# grep -qs "^$SOB" "$1" || echo "$SOB" >> "$1"
# This example catches duplicate Signed-off-by lines.
test "" = "$(grep '^Signed-off-by: ' "$1" |
sort | uniq -c | sed -e '/^[ ]*1[ ]/d')" || {
echo >&2 Duplicate Signed-off-by lines.
exit 1
}
#!/usr/bin/perl
use strict;
use warnings;
use IPC::Open2;
# An example hook script to integrate Watchman
# (https://facebook.github.io/watchman/) with git to speed up detecting
# new and modified files.
#
# The hook is passed a version (currently 1) and a time in nanoseconds
# formatted as a string and outputs to stdout all files that have been
# modified since the given time. Paths must be relative to the root of
# the working tree and separated by a single NUL.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "query-watchman" and set
# 'git config core.fsmonitor .git/hooks/query-watchman'
#
my ($version, $time) = @ARGV;
# Check the hook interface version
if ($version == 1) {
# convert nanoseconds to seconds
$time = int $time / 1000000000;
} else {
die "Unsupported query-fsmonitor hook version '$version'.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n";
}
my $git_work_tree;
if ($^O =~ 'msys' || $^O =~ 'cygwin') {
$git_work_tree = Win32::GetCwd();
$git_work_tree =~ tr/\\/\//;
} else {
require Cwd;
$git_work_tree = Cwd::cwd();
}
my $retry = 1;
launch_watchman();
sub launch_watchman {
my $pid = open2(\*CHLD_OUT, \*CHLD_IN, 'watchman -j --no-pretty')
or die "open2() failed: $!\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n";
# In the query expression below we're asking for names of files that
# changed since $time but were not transient (ie created after
# $time but no longer exist).
#
# To accomplish this, we're using the "since" generator to use the
# recency index to select candidate nodes and "fields" to limit the
# output to file names only. Then we're using the "expression" term to
# further constrain the results.
#
# The category of transient files that we want to ignore will have a
# creation clock (cclock) newer than $time_t value and will also not
# currently exist.
my $query = <<" END";
["query", "$git_work_tree", {
"since": $time,
"fields": ["name"],
"expression": ["not", ["allof", ["since", $time, "cclock"], ["not", "exists"]]]
}]
END
print CHLD_IN $query;
close CHLD_IN;
my $response = do {local $/; <CHLD_OUT>};
die "Watchman: command returned no output.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" if $response eq "";
die "Watchman: command returned invalid output: $response\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" unless $response =~ /^\{/;
my $json_pkg;
eval {
require JSON::XS;
$json_pkg = "JSON::XS";
1;
} or do {
require JSON::PP;
$json_pkg = "JSON::PP";
};
my $o = $json_pkg->new->utf8->decode($response);
if ($retry > 0 and $o->{error} and $o->{error} =~ m/unable to resolve root .* directory (.*) is not watched/) {
print STDERR "Adding '$git_work_tree' to watchman's watch list.\n";
$retry--;
qx/watchman watch "$git_work_tree"/;
die "Failed to make watchman watch '$git_work_tree'.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" if $? != 0;
# Watchman will always return all files on the first query so
# return the fast "everything is dirty" flag to git and do the
# Watchman query just to get it over with now so we won't pay
# the cost in git to look up each individual file.
print "/\0";
eval { launch_watchman() };
exit 0;
}
die "Watchman: $o->{error}.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" if $o->{error};
binmode STDOUT, ":utf8";
local $, = "\0";
print @{$o->{files}};
}
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to prepare a packed repository for use over
# dumb transports.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "post-update".
exec git update-server-info
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to verify what is about to be committed
# by applypatch from an e-mail message.
#
# The hook should exit with non-zero status after issuing an
# appropriate message if it wants to stop the commit.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "pre-applypatch".
. git-sh-setup
precommit="$(git rev-parse --git-path hooks/pre-commit)"
test -x "$precommit" && exec "$precommit" ${1+"$@"}
:
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to verify what is about to be committed.
# Called by "git commit" with no arguments. The hook should
# exit with non-zero status after issuing an appropriate message if
# it wants to stop the commit.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "pre-commit".
if git rev-parse --verify HEAD >/dev/null 2>&1
then
against=HEAD
else
# Initial commit: diff against an empty tree object
against=4b825dc642cb6eb9a060e54bf8d69288fbee4904
fi
# If you want to allow non-ASCII filenames set this variable to true.
allownonascii=$(git config --bool hooks.allownonascii)
# Redirect output to stderr.
exec 1>&2
# Cross platform projects tend to avoid non-ASCII filenames; prevent
# them from being added to the repository. We exploit the fact that the
# printable range starts at the space character and ends with tilde.
if [ "$allownonascii" != "true" ] &&
# Note that the use of brackets around a tr range is ok here, (it's
# even required, for portability to Solaris 10's /usr/bin/tr), since
# the square bracket bytes happen to fall in the designated range.
test $(git diff --cached --name-only --diff-filter=A -z $against |
LC_ALL=C tr -d '[ -~]\0' | wc -c) != 0
then
cat <<\EOF
Error: Attempt to add a non-ASCII file name.
This can cause problems if you want to work with people on other platforms.
To be portable it is advisable to rename the file.
If you know what you are doing you can disable this check using:
git config hooks.allownonascii true
EOF
exit 1
fi
# If there are whitespace errors, print the offending file names and fail.
exec git diff-index --check --cached $against --
#!/bin/sh
# An example hook script to verify what is about to be pushed. Called by "git
# push" after it has checked the remote status, but before anything has been
# pushed. If this script exits with a non-zero status nothing will be pushed.
#
# This hook is called with the following parameters:
#
# $1 -- Name of the remote to which the push is being done
# $2 -- URL to which the push is being done
#
# If pushing without using a named remote those arguments will be equal.
#
# Information about the commits which are being pushed is supplied as lines to
# the standard input in the form:
#
# <local ref> <local sha1> <remote ref> <remote sha1>
#
# This sample shows how to prevent push of commits where the log message starts
# with "WIP" (work in progress).
remote="$1"
url="$2"
z40=0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
while read local_ref local_sha remote_ref remote_sha
do
if [ "$local_sha" = $z40 ]
then
# Handle delete
:
else
if [ "$remote_sha" = $z40 ]
then
# New branch, examine all commits
range="$local_sha"
else
# Update to existing branch, examine new commits
range="$remote_sha..$local_sha"
fi
# Check for WIP commit
commit=`git rev-list -n 1 --grep '^WIP' "$range"`
if [ -n "$commit" ]
then
echo >&2 "Found WIP commit in $local_ref, not pushing"
exit 1
fi
fi
done
exit 0
#!/bin/sh
#
# Copyright (c) 2006, 2008 Junio C Hamano
#
# The "pre-rebase" hook is run just before "git rebase" starts doing
# its job, and can prevent the command from running by exiting with
# non-zero status.
#
# The hook is called with the following parameters:
#
# $1 -- the upstream the series was forked from.
# $2 -- the branch being rebased (or empty when rebasing the current branch).
#
# This sample shows how to prevent topic branches that are already
# merged to 'next' branch from getting rebased, because allowing it
# would result in rebasing already published history.
publish=next
basebranch="$1"
if test "$#" = 2
then
topic="refs/heads/$2"
else
topic=`git symbolic-ref HEAD` ||
exit 0 ;# we do not interrupt rebasing detached HEAD
fi
case "$topic" in
refs/heads/??/*)
;;
*)
exit 0 ;# we do not interrupt others.
;;
esac
# Now we are dealing with a topic branch being rebased
# on top of master. Is it OK to rebase it?
# Does the topic really exist?
git show-ref -q "$topic" || {
echo >&2 "No such branch $topic"
exit 1
}
# Is topic fully merged to master?
not_in_master=`git rev-list --pretty=oneline ^master "$topic"`
if test -z "$not_in_master"
then
echo >&2 "$topic is fully merged to master; better remove it."
exit 1 ;# we could allow it, but there is no point.
fi
# Is topic ever merged to next? If so you should not be rebasing it.
only_next_1=`git rev-list ^master "^$topic" ${publish} | sort`
only_next_2=`git rev-list ^master ${publish} | sort`
if test "$only_next_1" = "$only_next_2"
then
not_in_topic=`git rev-list "^$topic" master`
if test -z "$not_in_topic"
then
echo >&2 "$topic is already up to date with master"
exit 1 ;# we could allow it, but there is no point.
else
exit 0
fi
else
not_in_next=`git rev-list --pretty=oneline ^${publish} "$topic"`
/usr/bin/perl -e '
my $topic = $ARGV[0];
my $msg = "* $topic has commits already merged to public branch:\n";
my (%not_in_next) = map {
/^([0-9a-f]+) /;
($1 => 1);
} split(/\n/, $ARGV[1]);
for my $elem (map {
/^([0-9a-f]+) (.*)$/;
[$1 => $2];
} split(/\n/, $ARGV[2])) {
if (!exists $not_in_next{$elem->[0]}) {
if ($msg) {
print STDERR $msg;
undef $msg;
}
print STDERR " $elem->[1]\n";
}
}
' "$topic" "$not_in_next" "$not_in_master"
exit 1
fi
<<\DOC_END
This sample hook safeguards topic branches that have been
published from being rewound.
The workflow assumed here is:
* Once a topic branch forks from "master", "master" is never
merged into it again (either directly or indirectly).
* Once a topic branch is fully cooked and merged into "master",
it is deleted. If you need to build on top of it to correct
earlier mistakes, a new topic branch is created by forking at
the tip of the "master". This is not strictly necessary, but
it makes it easier to keep your history simple.
* Whenever you need to test or publish your changes to topic
branches, merge them into "next" branch.
The script, being an example, hardcodes the publish branch name
to be "next", but it is trivial to make it configurable via
$GIT_DIR/config mechanism.
With this workflow, you would want to know:
(1) ... if a topic branch has ever been merged to "next". Young
topic branches can have stupid mistakes you would rather
clean up before publishing, and things that have not been
merged into other branches can be easily rebased without
affecting other people. But once it is published, you would
not want to rewind it.
(2) ... if a topic branch has been fully merged to "master".
Then you can delete it. More importantly, you should not
build on top of it -- other people may already want to
change things related to the topic as patches against your
"master", so if you need further changes, it is better to
fork the topic (perhaps with the same name) afresh from the
tip of "master".
Let's look at this example:
o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o "next"
/ / / /
/ a---a---b A / /
/ / / /
/ / c---c---c---c B /
/ / / \ /
/ / / b---b C \ /
/ / / / \ /
---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o "master"
A, B and C are topic branches.
* A has one fix since it was merged up to "next".
* B has finished. It has been fully merged up to "master" and "next",
and is ready to be deleted.
* C has not merged to "next" at all.
We would want to allow C to be rebased, refuse A, and encourage
B to be deleted.
To compute (1):
git rev-list ^master ^topic next
git rev-list ^master next
if these match, topic has not merged in next at all.
To compute (2):
git rev-list master..topic
if this is empty, it is fully merged to "master".
DOC_END
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to make use of push options.
# The example simply echoes all push options that start with 'echoback='
# and rejects all pushes when the "reject" push option is used.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "pre-receive".
if test -n "$GIT_PUSH_OPTION_COUNT"
then
i=0
while test "$i" -lt "$GIT_PUSH_OPTION_COUNT"
do
eval "value=\$GIT_PUSH_OPTION_$i"
case "$value" in
echoback=*)
echo "echo from the pre-receive-hook: ${value#*=}" >&2
;;
reject)
exit 1
esac
i=$((i + 1))
done
fi
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to prepare the commit log message.
# Called by "git commit" with the name of the file that has the
# commit message, followed by the description of the commit
# message's source. The hook's purpose is to edit the commit
# message file. If the hook fails with a non-zero status,
# the commit is aborted.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "prepare-commit-msg".
# This hook includes three examples. The first one removes the
# "# Please enter the commit message..." help message.
#
# The second includes the output of "git diff --name-status -r"
# into the message, just before the "git status" output. It is
# commented because it doesn't cope with --amend or with squashed
# commits.
#
# The third example adds a Signed-off-by line to the message, that can
# still be edited. This is rarely a good idea.
COMMIT_MSG_FILE=$1
COMMIT_SOURCE=$2
SHA1=$3
/usr/bin/perl -i.bak -ne 'print unless(m/^. Please enter the commit message/..m/^#$/)' "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE"
# case "$COMMIT_SOURCE,$SHA1" in
# ,|template,)
# /usr/bin/perl -i.bak -pe '
# print "\n" . `git diff --cached --name-status -r`
# if /^#/ && $first++ == 0' "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE" ;;
# *) ;;
# esac
# SOB=$(git var GIT_COMMITTER_IDENT | sed -n 's/^\(.*>\).*$/Signed-off-by: \1/p')
# git interpret-trailers --in-place --trailer "$SOB" "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE"
# if test -z "$COMMIT_SOURCE"
# then
# /usr/bin/perl -i.bak -pe 'print "\n" if !$first_line++' "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE"
# fi
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to block unannotated tags from entering.
# Called by "git receive-pack" with arguments: refname sha1-old sha1-new
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "update".
#
# Config
# ------
# hooks.allowunannotated
# This boolean sets whether unannotated tags will be allowed into the
# repository. By default they won't be.
# hooks.allowdeletetag
# This boolean sets whether deleting tags will be allowed in the
# repository. By default they won't be.
# hooks.allowmodifytag
# This boolean sets whether a tag may be modified after creation. By default
# it won't be.
# hooks.allowdeletebranch
# This boolean sets whether deleting branches will be allowed in the
# repository. By default they won't be.
# hooks.denycreatebranch
# This boolean sets whether remotely creating branches will be denied
# in the repository. By default this is allowed.
#
# --- Command line
refname="$1"
oldrev="$2"
newrev="$3"
# --- Safety check
if [ -z "$GIT_DIR" ]; then
echo "Don't run this script from the command line." >&2
echo " (if you want, you could supply GIT_DIR then run" >&2
echo " $0 <ref> <oldrev> <newrev>)" >&2
exit 1
fi
if [ -z "$refname" -o -z "$oldrev" -o -z "$newrev" ]; then
echo "usage: $0 <ref> <oldrev> <newrev>" >&2
exit 1
fi
# --- Config
allowunannotated=$(git config --bool hooks.allowunannotated)
allowdeletebranch=$(git config --bool hooks.allowdeletebranch)
denycreatebranch=$(git config --bool hooks.denycreatebranch)
allowdeletetag=$(git config --bool hooks.allowdeletetag)
allowmodifytag=$(git config --bool hooks.allowmodifytag)
# check for no description
projectdesc=$(sed -e '1q' "$GIT_DIR/description")
case "$projectdesc" in
"Unnamed repository"* | "")
echo "*** Project description file hasn't been set" >&2
exit 1
;;
esac
# --- Check types
# if $newrev is 0000...0000, it's a commit to delete a ref.
zero="0000000000000000000000000000000000000000"
if [ "$newrev" = "$zero" ]; then
newrev_type=delete
else
newrev_type=$(git cat-file -t $newrev)
fi
case "$refname","$newrev_type" in
refs/tags/*,commit)
# un-annotated tag
short_refname=${refname##refs/tags/}
if [ "$allowunannotated" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** The un-annotated tag, $short_refname, is not allowed in this repository" >&2
echo "*** Use 'git tag [ -a | -s ]' for tags you want to propagate." >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/tags/*,delete)
# delete tag
if [ "$allowdeletetag" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** Deleting a tag is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/tags/*,tag)
# annotated tag
if [ "$allowmodifytag" != "true" ] && git rev-parse $refname > /dev/null 2>&1
then
echo "*** Tag '$refname' already exists." >&2
echo "*** Modifying a tag is not allowed in this repository." >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/heads/*,commit)
# branch
if [ "$oldrev" = "$zero" -a "$denycreatebranch" = "true" ]; then
echo "*** Creating a branch is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/heads/*,delete)
# delete branch
if [ "$allowdeletebranch" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** Deleting a branch is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/remotes/*,commit)
# tracking branch
;;
refs/remotes/*,delete)
# delete tracking branch
if [ "$allowdeletebranch" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** Deleting a tracking branch is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
*)
# Anything else (is there anything else?)
echo "*** Update hook: unknown type of update to ref $refname of type $newrev_type" >&2
exit 1
;;
esac
# --- Finished
exit 0
# git ls-files --others --exclude-from=.git/info/exclude
# Lines that start with '#' are comments.
# For a project mostly in C, the following would be a good set of
# exclude patterns (uncomment them if you want to use them):
# *.[oa]
# *~
xUo0OAJ}iUd
>85mFwCH}ϿΖ$av=lnlUWI?tESNtP/Kd伶%!ZBѧ;vDf26`ڣ ڠie*¤΢M JR|aaPa$)Vغ6S3C/MGQ;.Tɨ`Tc
tЦ]&Lʑ1R 2Y>-bm|pHc+?`cy4,X1 '07Q}"4.*K3ZBk3\rUπ5:렂,,J{ڟEFRadNǁ3[zȮx7ӃۚiTVSG
L7#v/`]@Բ?c%eDZ{Y9Z
\ No newline at end of file
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\ No newline at end of file
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\ No newline at end of file
4ff4aeaf8b5b303e11d12f200d58ca9d3cc98e56 tag 'v0.1.0' of https://github.com/lovoo/goka
[core]
repositoryformatversion = 0
filemode = true
bare = true
ignorecase = true
precomposeunicode = true
[remote "origin"]
url = https://github.com/lovoo/goka
fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/*
Unnamed repository; edit this file 'description' to name the repository.
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to check the commit log message taken by
# applypatch from an e-mail message.
#
# The hook should exit with non-zero status after issuing an
# appropriate message if it wants to stop the commit. The hook is
# allowed to edit the commit message file.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "applypatch-msg".
. git-sh-setup
commitmsg="$(git rev-parse --git-path hooks/commit-msg)"
test -x "$commitmsg" && exec "$commitmsg" ${1+"$@"}
:
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to check the commit log message.
# Called by "git commit" with one argument, the name of the file
# that has the commit message. The hook should exit with non-zero
# status after issuing an appropriate message if it wants to stop the
# commit. The hook is allowed to edit the commit message file.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "commit-msg".
# Uncomment the below to add a Signed-off-by line to the message.
# Doing this in a hook is a bad idea in general, but the prepare-commit-msg
# hook is more suited to it.
#
# SOB=$(git var GIT_AUTHOR_IDENT | sed -n 's/^\(.*>\).*$/Signed-off-by: \1/p')
# grep -qs "^$SOB" "$1" || echo "$SOB" >> "$1"
# This example catches duplicate Signed-off-by lines.
test "" = "$(grep '^Signed-off-by: ' "$1" |
sort | uniq -c | sed -e '/^[ ]*1[ ]/d')" || {
echo >&2 Duplicate Signed-off-by lines.
exit 1
}
#!/usr/bin/perl
use strict;
use warnings;
use IPC::Open2;
# An example hook script to integrate Watchman
# (https://facebook.github.io/watchman/) with git to speed up detecting
# new and modified files.
#
# The hook is passed a version (currently 1) and a time in nanoseconds
# formatted as a string and outputs to stdout all files that have been
# modified since the given time. Paths must be relative to the root of
# the working tree and separated by a single NUL.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "query-watchman" and set
# 'git config core.fsmonitor .git/hooks/query-watchman'
#
my ($version, $time) = @ARGV;
# Check the hook interface version
if ($version == 1) {
# convert nanoseconds to seconds
$time = int $time / 1000000000;
} else {
die "Unsupported query-fsmonitor hook version '$version'.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n";
}
my $git_work_tree;
if ($^O =~ 'msys' || $^O =~ 'cygwin') {
$git_work_tree = Win32::GetCwd();
$git_work_tree =~ tr/\\/\//;
} else {
require Cwd;
$git_work_tree = Cwd::cwd();
}
my $retry = 1;
launch_watchman();
sub launch_watchman {
my $pid = open2(\*CHLD_OUT, \*CHLD_IN, 'watchman -j --no-pretty')
or die "open2() failed: $!\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n";
# In the query expression below we're asking for names of files that
# changed since $time but were not transient (ie created after
# $time but no longer exist).
#
# To accomplish this, we're using the "since" generator to use the
# recency index to select candidate nodes and "fields" to limit the
# output to file names only. Then we're using the "expression" term to
# further constrain the results.
#
# The category of transient files that we want to ignore will have a
# creation clock (cclock) newer than $time_t value and will also not
# currently exist.
my $query = <<" END";
["query", "$git_work_tree", {
"since": $time,
"fields": ["name"],
"expression": ["not", ["allof", ["since", $time, "cclock"], ["not", "exists"]]]
}]
END
print CHLD_IN $query;
close CHLD_IN;
my $response = do {local $/; <CHLD_OUT>};
die "Watchman: command returned no output.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" if $response eq "";
die "Watchman: command returned invalid output: $response\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" unless $response =~ /^\{/;
my $json_pkg;
eval {
require JSON::XS;
$json_pkg = "JSON::XS";
1;
} or do {
require JSON::PP;
$json_pkg = "JSON::PP";
};
my $o = $json_pkg->new->utf8->decode($response);
if ($retry > 0 and $o->{error} and $o->{error} =~ m/unable to resolve root .* directory (.*) is not watched/) {
print STDERR "Adding '$git_work_tree' to watchman's watch list.\n";
$retry--;
qx/watchman watch "$git_work_tree"/;
die "Failed to make watchman watch '$git_work_tree'.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" if $? != 0;
# Watchman will always return all files on the first query so
# return the fast "everything is dirty" flag to git and do the
# Watchman query just to get it over with now so we won't pay
# the cost in git to look up each individual file.
print "/\0";
eval { launch_watchman() };
exit 0;
}
die "Watchman: $o->{error}.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" if $o->{error};
binmode STDOUT, ":utf8";
local $, = "\0";
print @{$o->{files}};
}
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to prepare a packed repository for use over
# dumb transports.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "post-update".
exec git update-server-info
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to verify what is about to be committed
# by applypatch from an e-mail message.
#
# The hook should exit with non-zero status after issuing an
# appropriate message if it wants to stop the commit.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "pre-applypatch".
. git-sh-setup
precommit="$(git rev-parse --git-path hooks/pre-commit)"
test -x "$precommit" && exec "$precommit" ${1+"$@"}
:
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to verify what is about to be committed.
# Called by "git commit" with no arguments. The hook should
# exit with non-zero status after issuing an appropriate message if
# it wants to stop the commit.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "pre-commit".
if git rev-parse --verify HEAD >/dev/null 2>&1
then
against=HEAD
else
# Initial commit: diff against an empty tree object
against=4b825dc642cb6eb9a060e54bf8d69288fbee4904
fi
# If you want to allow non-ASCII filenames set this variable to true.
allownonascii=$(git config --bool hooks.allownonascii)
# Redirect output to stderr.
exec 1>&2
# Cross platform projects tend to avoid non-ASCII filenames; prevent
# them from being added to the repository. We exploit the fact that the
# printable range starts at the space character and ends with tilde.
if [ "$allownonascii" != "true" ] &&
# Note that the use of brackets around a tr range is ok here, (it's
# even required, for portability to Solaris 10's /usr/bin/tr), since
# the square bracket bytes happen to fall in the designated range.
test $(git diff --cached --name-only --diff-filter=A -z $against |
LC_ALL=C tr -d '[ -~]\0' | wc -c) != 0
then
cat <<\EOF
Error: Attempt to add a non-ASCII file name.
This can cause problems if you want to work with people on other platforms.
To be portable it is advisable to rename the file.
If you know what you are doing you can disable this check using:
git config hooks.allownonascii true
EOF
exit 1
fi
# If there are whitespace errors, print the offending file names and fail.
exec git diff-index --check --cached $against --
#!/bin/sh
# An example hook script to verify what is about to be pushed. Called by "git
# push" after it has checked the remote status, but before anything has been
# pushed. If this script exits with a non-zero status nothing will be pushed.
#
# This hook is called with the following parameters:
#
# $1 -- Name of the remote to which the push is being done
# $2 -- URL to which the push is being done
#
# If pushing without using a named remote those arguments will be equal.
#
# Information about the commits which are being pushed is supplied as lines to
# the standard input in the form:
#
# <local ref> <local sha1> <remote ref> <remote sha1>
#
# This sample shows how to prevent push of commits where the log message starts
# with "WIP" (work in progress).
remote="$1"
url="$2"
z40=0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
while read local_ref local_sha remote_ref remote_sha
do
if [ "$local_sha" = $z40 ]
then
# Handle delete
:
else
if [ "$remote_sha" = $z40 ]
then
# New branch, examine all commits
range="$local_sha"
else
# Update to existing branch, examine new commits
range="$remote_sha..$local_sha"
fi
# Check for WIP commit
commit=`git rev-list -n 1 --grep '^WIP' "$range"`
if [ -n "$commit" ]
then
echo >&2 "Found WIP commit in $local_ref, not pushing"
exit 1
fi
fi
done
exit 0
#!/bin/sh
#
# Copyright (c) 2006, 2008 Junio C Hamano
#
# The "pre-rebase" hook is run just before "git rebase" starts doing
# its job, and can prevent the command from running by exiting with
# non-zero status.
#
# The hook is called with the following parameters:
#
# $1 -- the upstream the series was forked from.
# $2 -- the branch being rebased (or empty when rebasing the current branch).
#
# This sample shows how to prevent topic branches that are already
# merged to 'next' branch from getting rebased, because allowing it
# would result in rebasing already published history.
publish=next
basebranch="$1"
if test "$#" = 2
then
topic="refs/heads/$2"
else
topic=`git symbolic-ref HEAD` ||
exit 0 ;# we do not interrupt rebasing detached HEAD
fi
case "$topic" in
refs/heads/??/*)
;;
*)
exit 0 ;# we do not interrupt others.
;;
esac
# Now we are dealing with a topic branch being rebased
# on top of master. Is it OK to rebase it?
# Does the topic really exist?
git show-ref -q "$topic" || {
echo >&2 "No such branch $topic"
exit 1
}
# Is topic fully merged to master?
not_in_master=`git rev-list --pretty=oneline ^master "$topic"`
if test -z "$not_in_master"
then
echo >&2 "$topic is fully merged to master; better remove it."
exit 1 ;# we could allow it, but there is no point.
fi
# Is topic ever merged to next? If so you should not be rebasing it.
only_next_1=`git rev-list ^master "^$topic" ${publish} | sort`
only_next_2=`git rev-list ^master ${publish} | sort`
if test "$only_next_1" = "$only_next_2"
then
not_in_topic=`git rev-list "^$topic" master`
if test -z "$not_in_topic"
then
echo >&2 "$topic is already up to date with master"
exit 1 ;# we could allow it, but there is no point.
else
exit 0
fi
else
not_in_next=`git rev-list --pretty=oneline ^${publish} "$topic"`
/usr/bin/perl -e '
my $topic = $ARGV[0];
my $msg = "* $topic has commits already merged to public branch:\n";
my (%not_in_next) = map {
/^([0-9a-f]+) /;
($1 => 1);
} split(/\n/, $ARGV[1]);
for my $elem (map {
/^([0-9a-f]+) (.*)$/;
[$1 => $2];
} split(/\n/, $ARGV[2])) {
if (!exists $not_in_next{$elem->[0]}) {
if ($msg) {
print STDERR $msg;
undef $msg;
}
print STDERR " $elem->[1]\n";
}
}
' "$topic" "$not_in_next" "$not_in_master"
exit 1
fi
<<\DOC_END
This sample hook safeguards topic branches that have been
published from being rewound.
The workflow assumed here is:
* Once a topic branch forks from "master", "master" is never
merged into it again (either directly or indirectly).
* Once a topic branch is fully cooked and merged into "master",
it is deleted. If you need to build on top of it to correct
earlier mistakes, a new topic branch is created by forking at
the tip of the "master". This is not strictly necessary, but
it makes it easier to keep your history simple.
* Whenever you need to test or publish your changes to topic
branches, merge them into "next" branch.
The script, being an example, hardcodes the publish branch name
to be "next", but it is trivial to make it configurable via
$GIT_DIR/config mechanism.
With this workflow, you would want to know:
(1) ... if a topic branch has ever been merged to "next". Young
topic branches can have stupid mistakes you would rather
clean up before publishing, and things that have not been
merged into other branches can be easily rebased without
affecting other people. But once it is published, you would
not want to rewind it.
(2) ... if a topic branch has been fully merged to "master".
Then you can delete it. More importantly, you should not
build on top of it -- other people may already want to
change things related to the topic as patches against your
"master", so if you need further changes, it is better to
fork the topic (perhaps with the same name) afresh from the
tip of "master".
Let's look at this example:
o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o "next"
/ / / /
/ a---a---b A / /
/ / / /
/ / c---c---c---c B /
/ / / \ /
/ / / b---b C \ /
/ / / / \ /
---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o "master"
A, B and C are topic branches.
* A has one fix since it was merged up to "next".
* B has finished. It has been fully merged up to "master" and "next",
and is ready to be deleted.
* C has not merged to "next" at all.
We would want to allow C to be rebased, refuse A, and encourage
B to be deleted.
To compute (1):
git rev-list ^master ^topic next
git rev-list ^master next
if these match, topic has not merged in next at all.
To compute (2):
git rev-list master..topic
if this is empty, it is fully merged to "master".
DOC_END
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to make use of push options.
# The example simply echoes all push options that start with 'echoback='
# and rejects all pushes when the "reject" push option is used.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "pre-receive".
if test -n "$GIT_PUSH_OPTION_COUNT"
then
i=0
while test "$i" -lt "$GIT_PUSH_OPTION_COUNT"
do
eval "value=\$GIT_PUSH_OPTION_$i"
case "$value" in
echoback=*)
echo "echo from the pre-receive-hook: ${value#*=}" >&2
;;
reject)
exit 1
esac
i=$((i + 1))
done
fi
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to prepare the commit log message.
# Called by "git commit" with the name of the file that has the
# commit message, followed by the description of the commit
# message's source. The hook's purpose is to edit the commit
# message file. If the hook fails with a non-zero status,
# the commit is aborted.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "prepare-commit-msg".
# This hook includes three examples. The first one removes the
# "# Please enter the commit message..." help message.
#
# The second includes the output of "git diff --name-status -r"
# into the message, just before the "git status" output. It is
# commented because it doesn't cope with --amend or with squashed
# commits.
#
# The third example adds a Signed-off-by line to the message, that can
# still be edited. This is rarely a good idea.
COMMIT_MSG_FILE=$1
COMMIT_SOURCE=$2
SHA1=$3
/usr/bin/perl -i.bak -ne 'print unless(m/^. Please enter the commit message/..m/^#$/)' "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE"
# case "$COMMIT_SOURCE,$SHA1" in
# ,|template,)
# /usr/bin/perl -i.bak -pe '
# print "\n" . `git diff --cached --name-status -r`
# if /^#/ && $first++ == 0' "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE" ;;
# *) ;;
# esac
# SOB=$(git var GIT_COMMITTER_IDENT | sed -n 's/^\(.*>\).*$/Signed-off-by: \1/p')
# git interpret-trailers --in-place --trailer "$SOB" "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE"
# if test -z "$COMMIT_SOURCE"
# then
# /usr/bin/perl -i.bak -pe 'print "\n" if !$first_line++' "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE"
# fi
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to block unannotated tags from entering.
# Called by "git receive-pack" with arguments: refname sha1-old sha1-new
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "update".
#
# Config
# ------
# hooks.allowunannotated
# This boolean sets whether unannotated tags will be allowed into the
# repository. By default they won't be.
# hooks.allowdeletetag
# This boolean sets whether deleting tags will be allowed in the
# repository. By default they won't be.
# hooks.allowmodifytag
# This boolean sets whether a tag may be modified after creation. By default
# it won't be.
# hooks.allowdeletebranch
# This boolean sets whether deleting branches will be allowed in the
# repository. By default they won't be.
# hooks.denycreatebranch
# This boolean sets whether remotely creating branches will be denied
# in the repository. By default this is allowed.
#
# --- Command line
refname="$1"
oldrev="$2"
newrev="$3"
# --- Safety check
if [ -z "$GIT_DIR" ]; then
echo "Don't run this script from the command line." >&2
echo " (if you want, you could supply GIT_DIR then run" >&2
echo " $0 <ref> <oldrev> <newrev>)" >&2
exit 1
fi
if [ -z "$refname" -o -z "$oldrev" -o -z "$newrev" ]; then
echo "usage: $0 <ref> <oldrev> <newrev>" >&2
exit 1
fi
# --- Config
allowunannotated=$(git config --bool hooks.allowunannotated)
allowdeletebranch=$(git config --bool hooks.allowdeletebranch)
denycreatebranch=$(git config --bool hooks.denycreatebranch)
allowdeletetag=$(git config --bool hooks.allowdeletetag)
allowmodifytag=$(git config --bool hooks.allowmodifytag)
# check for no description
projectdesc=$(sed -e '1q' "$GIT_DIR/description")
case "$projectdesc" in
"Unnamed repository"* | "")
echo "*** Project description file hasn't been set" >&2
exit 1
;;
esac
# --- Check types
# if $newrev is 0000...0000, it's a commit to delete a ref.
zero="0000000000000000000000000000000000000000"
if [ "$newrev" = "$zero" ]; then
newrev_type=delete
else
newrev_type=$(git cat-file -t $newrev)
fi
case "$refname","$newrev_type" in
refs/tags/*,commit)
# un-annotated tag
short_refname=${refname##refs/tags/}
if [ "$allowunannotated" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** The un-annotated tag, $short_refname, is not allowed in this repository" >&2
echo "*** Use 'git tag [ -a | -s ]' for tags you want to propagate." >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/tags/*,delete)
# delete tag
if [ "$allowdeletetag" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** Deleting a tag is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/tags/*,tag)
# annotated tag
if [ "$allowmodifytag" != "true" ] && git rev-parse $refname > /dev/null 2>&1
then
echo "*** Tag '$refname' already exists." >&2
echo "*** Modifying a tag is not allowed in this repository." >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/heads/*,commit)
# branch
if [ "$oldrev" = "$zero" -a "$denycreatebranch" = "true" ]; then
echo "*** Creating a branch is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/heads/*,delete)
# delete branch
if [ "$allowdeletebranch" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** Deleting a branch is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/remotes/*,commit)
# tracking branch
;;
refs/remotes/*,delete)
# delete tracking branch
if [ "$allowdeletebranch" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** Deleting a tracking branch is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
*)
# Anything else (is there anything else?)
echo "*** Update hook: unknown type of update to ref $refname of type $newrev_type" >&2
exit 1
;;
esac
# --- Finished
exit 0
# git ls-files --others --exclude-from=.git/info/exclude
# Lines that start with '#' are comments.
# For a project mostly in C, the following would be a good set of
# exclude patterns (uncomment them if you want to use them):
# *.[oa]
# *~
git2:https://github.com/syndtr/goleveldb
\ No newline at end of file
b001fa50d6b27f3f0bb175a87d0cb55426d0a0ae 'b001fa50d6b27f3f0bb175a87d0cb55426d0a0ae' of https://github.com/syndtr/goleveldb
[core]
repositoryformatversion = 0
filemode = true
bare = true
ignorecase = true
precomposeunicode = true
[remote "origin"]
url = https://github.com/syndtr/goleveldb
fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/*
Unnamed repository; edit this file 'description' to name the repository.
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to check the commit log message taken by
# applypatch from an e-mail message.
#
# The hook should exit with non-zero status after issuing an
# appropriate message if it wants to stop the commit. The hook is
# allowed to edit the commit message file.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "applypatch-msg".
. git-sh-setup
commitmsg="$(git rev-parse --git-path hooks/commit-msg)"
test -x "$commitmsg" && exec "$commitmsg" ${1+"$@"}
:
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to check the commit log message.
# Called by "git commit" with one argument, the name of the file
# that has the commit message. The hook should exit with non-zero
# status after issuing an appropriate message if it wants to stop the
# commit. The hook is allowed to edit the commit message file.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "commit-msg".
# Uncomment the below to add a Signed-off-by line to the message.
# Doing this in a hook is a bad idea in general, but the prepare-commit-msg
# hook is more suited to it.
#
# SOB=$(git var GIT_AUTHOR_IDENT | sed -n 's/^\(.*>\).*$/Signed-off-by: \1/p')
# grep -qs "^$SOB" "$1" || echo "$SOB" >> "$1"
# This example catches duplicate Signed-off-by lines.
test "" = "$(grep '^Signed-off-by: ' "$1" |
sort | uniq -c | sed -e '/^[ ]*1[ ]/d')" || {
echo >&2 Duplicate Signed-off-by lines.
exit 1
}
#!/usr/bin/perl
use strict;
use warnings;
use IPC::Open2;
# An example hook script to integrate Watchman
# (https://facebook.github.io/watchman/) with git to speed up detecting
# new and modified files.
#
# The hook is passed a version (currently 1) and a time in nanoseconds
# formatted as a string and outputs to stdout all files that have been
# modified since the given time. Paths must be relative to the root of
# the working tree and separated by a single NUL.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "query-watchman" and set
# 'git config core.fsmonitor .git/hooks/query-watchman'
#
my ($version, $time) = @ARGV;
# Check the hook interface version
if ($version == 1) {
# convert nanoseconds to seconds
$time = int $time / 1000000000;
} else {
die "Unsupported query-fsmonitor hook version '$version'.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n";
}
my $git_work_tree;
if ($^O =~ 'msys' || $^O =~ 'cygwin') {
$git_work_tree = Win32::GetCwd();
$git_work_tree =~ tr/\\/\//;
} else {
require Cwd;
$git_work_tree = Cwd::cwd();
}
my $retry = 1;
launch_watchman();
sub launch_watchman {
my $pid = open2(\*CHLD_OUT, \*CHLD_IN, 'watchman -j --no-pretty')
or die "open2() failed: $!\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n";
# In the query expression below we're asking for names of files that
# changed since $time but were not transient (ie created after
# $time but no longer exist).
#
# To accomplish this, we're using the "since" generator to use the
# recency index to select candidate nodes and "fields" to limit the
# output to file names only. Then we're using the "expression" term to
# further constrain the results.
#
# The category of transient files that we want to ignore will have a
# creation clock (cclock) newer than $time_t value and will also not
# currently exist.
my $query = <<" END";
["query", "$git_work_tree", {
"since": $time,
"fields": ["name"],
"expression": ["not", ["allof", ["since", $time, "cclock"], ["not", "exists"]]]
}]
END
print CHLD_IN $query;
close CHLD_IN;
my $response = do {local $/; <CHLD_OUT>};
die "Watchman: command returned no output.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" if $response eq "";
die "Watchman: command returned invalid output: $response\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" unless $response =~ /^\{/;
my $json_pkg;
eval {
require JSON::XS;
$json_pkg = "JSON::XS";
1;
} or do {
require JSON::PP;
$json_pkg = "JSON::PP";
};
my $o = $json_pkg->new->utf8->decode($response);
if ($retry > 0 and $o->{error} and $o->{error} =~ m/unable to resolve root .* directory (.*) is not watched/) {
print STDERR "Adding '$git_work_tree' to watchman's watch list.\n";
$retry--;
qx/watchman watch "$git_work_tree"/;
die "Failed to make watchman watch '$git_work_tree'.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" if $? != 0;
# Watchman will always return all files on the first query so
# return the fast "everything is dirty" flag to git and do the
# Watchman query just to get it over with now so we won't pay
# the cost in git to look up each individual file.
print "/\0";
eval { launch_watchman() };
exit 0;
}
die "Watchman: $o->{error}.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" if $o->{error};
binmode STDOUT, ":utf8";
local $, = "\0";
print @{$o->{files}};
}
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to prepare a packed repository for use over
# dumb transports.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "post-update".
exec git update-server-info
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to verify what is about to be committed
# by applypatch from an e-mail message.
#
# The hook should exit with non-zero status after issuing an
# appropriate message if it wants to stop the commit.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "pre-applypatch".
. git-sh-setup
precommit="$(git rev-parse --git-path hooks/pre-commit)"
test -x "$precommit" && exec "$precommit" ${1+"$@"}
:
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to verify what is about to be committed.
# Called by "git commit" with no arguments. The hook should
# exit with non-zero status after issuing an appropriate message if
# it wants to stop the commit.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "pre-commit".
if git rev-parse --verify HEAD >/dev/null 2>&1
then
against=HEAD
else
# Initial commit: diff against an empty tree object
against=4b825dc642cb6eb9a060e54bf8d69288fbee4904
fi
# If you want to allow non-ASCII filenames set this variable to true.
allownonascii=$(git config --bool hooks.allownonascii)
# Redirect output to stderr.
exec 1>&2
# Cross platform projects tend to avoid non-ASCII filenames; prevent
# them from being added to the repository. We exploit the fact that the
# printable range starts at the space character and ends with tilde.
if [ "$allownonascii" != "true" ] &&
# Note that the use of brackets around a tr range is ok here, (it's
# even required, for portability to Solaris 10's /usr/bin/tr), since
# the square bracket bytes happen to fall in the designated range.
test $(git diff --cached --name-only --diff-filter=A -z $against |
LC_ALL=C tr -d '[ -~]\0' | wc -c) != 0
then
cat <<\EOF
Error: Attempt to add a non-ASCII file name.
This can cause problems if you want to work with people on other platforms.
To be portable it is advisable to rename the file.
If you know what you are doing you can disable this check using:
git config hooks.allownonascii true
EOF
exit 1
fi
# If there are whitespace errors, print the offending file names and fail.
exec git diff-index --check --cached $against --
#!/bin/sh
# An example hook script to verify what is about to be pushed. Called by "git
# push" after it has checked the remote status, but before anything has been
# pushed. If this script exits with a non-zero status nothing will be pushed.
#
# This hook is called with the following parameters:
#
# $1 -- Name of the remote to which the push is being done
# $2 -- URL to which the push is being done
#
# If pushing without using a named remote those arguments will be equal.
#
# Information about the commits which are being pushed is supplied as lines to
# the standard input in the form:
#
# <local ref> <local sha1> <remote ref> <remote sha1>
#
# This sample shows how to prevent push of commits where the log message starts
# with "WIP" (work in progress).
remote="$1"
url="$2"
z40=0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
while read local_ref local_sha remote_ref remote_sha
do
if [ "$local_sha" = $z40 ]
then
# Handle delete
:
else
if [ "$remote_sha" = $z40 ]
then
# New branch, examine all commits
range="$local_sha"
else
# Update to existing branch, examine new commits
range="$remote_sha..$local_sha"
fi
# Check for WIP commit
commit=`git rev-list -n 1 --grep '^WIP' "$range"`
if [ -n "$commit" ]
then
echo >&2 "Found WIP commit in $local_ref, not pushing"
exit 1
fi
fi
done
exit 0
#!/bin/sh
#
# Copyright (c) 2006, 2008 Junio C Hamano
#
# The "pre-rebase" hook is run just before "git rebase" starts doing
# its job, and can prevent the command from running by exiting with
# non-zero status.
#
# The hook is called with the following parameters:
#
# $1 -- the upstream the series was forked from.
# $2 -- the branch being rebased (or empty when rebasing the current branch).
#
# This sample shows how to prevent topic branches that are already
# merged to 'next' branch from getting rebased, because allowing it
# would result in rebasing already published history.
publish=next
basebranch="$1"
if test "$#" = 2
then
topic="refs/heads/$2"
else
topic=`git symbolic-ref HEAD` ||
exit 0 ;# we do not interrupt rebasing detached HEAD
fi
case "$topic" in
refs/heads/??/*)
;;
*)
exit 0 ;# we do not interrupt others.
;;
esac
# Now we are dealing with a topic branch being rebased
# on top of master. Is it OK to rebase it?
# Does the topic really exist?
git show-ref -q "$topic" || {
echo >&2 "No such branch $topic"
exit 1
}
# Is topic fully merged to master?
not_in_master=`git rev-list --pretty=oneline ^master "$topic"`
if test -z "$not_in_master"
then
echo >&2 "$topic is fully merged to master; better remove it."
exit 1 ;# we could allow it, but there is no point.
fi
# Is topic ever merged to next? If so you should not be rebasing it.
only_next_1=`git rev-list ^master "^$topic" ${publish} | sort`
only_next_2=`git rev-list ^master ${publish} | sort`
if test "$only_next_1" = "$only_next_2"
then
not_in_topic=`git rev-list "^$topic" master`
if test -z "$not_in_topic"
then
echo >&2 "$topic is already up to date with master"
exit 1 ;# we could allow it, but there is no point.
else
exit 0
fi
else
not_in_next=`git rev-list --pretty=oneline ^${publish} "$topic"`
/usr/bin/perl -e '
my $topic = $ARGV[0];
my $msg = "* $topic has commits already merged to public branch:\n";
my (%not_in_next) = map {
/^([0-9a-f]+) /;
($1 => 1);
} split(/\n/, $ARGV[1]);
for my $elem (map {
/^([0-9a-f]+) (.*)$/;
[$1 => $2];
} split(/\n/, $ARGV[2])) {
if (!exists $not_in_next{$elem->[0]}) {
if ($msg) {
print STDERR $msg;
undef $msg;
}
print STDERR " $elem->[1]\n";
}
}
' "$topic" "$not_in_next" "$not_in_master"
exit 1
fi
<<\DOC_END
This sample hook safeguards topic branches that have been
published from being rewound.
The workflow assumed here is:
* Once a topic branch forks from "master", "master" is never
merged into it again (either directly or indirectly).
* Once a topic branch is fully cooked and merged into "master",
it is deleted. If you need to build on top of it to correct
earlier mistakes, a new topic branch is created by forking at
the tip of the "master". This is not strictly necessary, but
it makes it easier to keep your history simple.
* Whenever you need to test or publish your changes to topic
branches, merge them into "next" branch.
The script, being an example, hardcodes the publish branch name
to be "next", but it is trivial to make it configurable via
$GIT_DIR/config mechanism.
With this workflow, you would want to know:
(1) ... if a topic branch has ever been merged to "next". Young
topic branches can have stupid mistakes you would rather
clean up before publishing, and things that have not been
merged into other branches can be easily rebased without
affecting other people. But once it is published, you would
not want to rewind it.
(2) ... if a topic branch has been fully merged to "master".
Then you can delete it. More importantly, you should not
build on top of it -- other people may already want to
change things related to the topic as patches against your
"master", so if you need further changes, it is better to
fork the topic (perhaps with the same name) afresh from the
tip of "master".
Let's look at this example:
o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o "next"
/ / / /
/ a---a---b A / /
/ / / /
/ / c---c---c---c B /
/ / / \ /
/ / / b---b C \ /
/ / / / \ /
---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o "master"
A, B and C are topic branches.
* A has one fix since it was merged up to "next".
* B has finished. It has been fully merged up to "master" and "next",
and is ready to be deleted.
* C has not merged to "next" at all.
We would want to allow C to be rebased, refuse A, and encourage
B to be deleted.
To compute (1):
git rev-list ^master ^topic next
git rev-list ^master next
if these match, topic has not merged in next at all.
To compute (2):
git rev-list master..topic
if this is empty, it is fully merged to "master".
DOC_END
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to make use of push options.
# The example simply echoes all push options that start with 'echoback='
# and rejects all pushes when the "reject" push option is used.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "pre-receive".
if test -n "$GIT_PUSH_OPTION_COUNT"
then
i=0
while test "$i" -lt "$GIT_PUSH_OPTION_COUNT"
do
eval "value=\$GIT_PUSH_OPTION_$i"
case "$value" in
echoback=*)
echo "echo from the pre-receive-hook: ${value#*=}" >&2
;;
reject)
exit 1
esac
i=$((i + 1))
done
fi
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to prepare the commit log message.
# Called by "git commit" with the name of the file that has the
# commit message, followed by the description of the commit
# message's source. The hook's purpose is to edit the commit
# message file. If the hook fails with a non-zero status,
# the commit is aborted.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "prepare-commit-msg".
# This hook includes three examples. The first one removes the
# "# Please enter the commit message..." help message.
#
# The second includes the output of "git diff --name-status -r"
# into the message, just before the "git status" output. It is
# commented because it doesn't cope with --amend or with squashed
# commits.
#
# The third example adds a Signed-off-by line to the message, that can
# still be edited. This is rarely a good idea.
COMMIT_MSG_FILE=$1
COMMIT_SOURCE=$2
SHA1=$3
/usr/bin/perl -i.bak -ne 'print unless(m/^. Please enter the commit message/..m/^#$/)' "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE"
# case "$COMMIT_SOURCE,$SHA1" in
# ,|template,)
# /usr/bin/perl -i.bak -pe '
# print "\n" . `git diff --cached --name-status -r`
# if /^#/ && $first++ == 0' "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE" ;;
# *) ;;
# esac
# SOB=$(git var GIT_COMMITTER_IDENT | sed -n 's/^\(.*>\).*$/Signed-off-by: \1/p')
# git interpret-trailers --in-place --trailer "$SOB" "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE"
# if test -z "$COMMIT_SOURCE"
# then
# /usr/bin/perl -i.bak -pe 'print "\n" if !$first_line++' "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE"
# fi
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to block unannotated tags from entering.
# Called by "git receive-pack" with arguments: refname sha1-old sha1-new
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "update".
#
# Config
# ------
# hooks.allowunannotated
# This boolean sets whether unannotated tags will be allowed into the
# repository. By default they won't be.
# hooks.allowdeletetag
# This boolean sets whether deleting tags will be allowed in the
# repository. By default they won't be.
# hooks.allowmodifytag
# This boolean sets whether a tag may be modified after creation. By default
# it won't be.
# hooks.allowdeletebranch
# This boolean sets whether deleting branches will be allowed in the
# repository. By default they won't be.
# hooks.denycreatebranch
# This boolean sets whether remotely creating branches will be denied
# in the repository. By default this is allowed.
#
# --- Command line
refname="$1"
oldrev="$2"
newrev="$3"
# --- Safety check
if [ -z "$GIT_DIR" ]; then
echo "Don't run this script from the command line." >&2
echo " (if you want, you could supply GIT_DIR then run" >&2
echo " $0 <ref> <oldrev> <newrev>)" >&2
exit 1
fi
if [ -z "$refname" -o -z "$oldrev" -o -z "$newrev" ]; then
echo "usage: $0 <ref> <oldrev> <newrev>" >&2
exit 1
fi
# --- Config
allowunannotated=$(git config --bool hooks.allowunannotated)
allowdeletebranch=$(git config --bool hooks.allowdeletebranch)
denycreatebranch=$(git config --bool hooks.denycreatebranch)
allowdeletetag=$(git config --bool hooks.allowdeletetag)
allowmodifytag=$(git config --bool hooks.allowmodifytag)
# check for no description
projectdesc=$(sed -e '1q' "$GIT_DIR/description")
case "$projectdesc" in
"Unnamed repository"* | "")
echo "*** Project description file hasn't been set" >&2
exit 1
;;
esac
# --- Check types
# if $newrev is 0000...0000, it's a commit to delete a ref.
zero="0000000000000000000000000000000000000000"
if [ "$newrev" = "$zero" ]; then
newrev_type=delete
else
newrev_type=$(git cat-file -t $newrev)
fi
case "$refname","$newrev_type" in
refs/tags/*,commit)
# un-annotated tag
short_refname=${refname##refs/tags/}
if [ "$allowunannotated" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** The un-annotated tag, $short_refname, is not allowed in this repository" >&2
echo "*** Use 'git tag [ -a | -s ]' for tags you want to propagate." >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/tags/*,delete)
# delete tag
if [ "$allowdeletetag" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** Deleting a tag is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/tags/*,tag)
# annotated tag
if [ "$allowmodifytag" != "true" ] && git rev-parse $refname > /dev/null 2>&1
then
echo "*** Tag '$refname' already exists." >&2
echo "*** Modifying a tag is not allowed in this repository." >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/heads/*,commit)
# branch
if [ "$oldrev" = "$zero" -a "$denycreatebranch" = "true" ]; then
echo "*** Creating a branch is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/heads/*,delete)
# delete branch
if [ "$allowdeletebranch" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** Deleting a branch is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/remotes/*,commit)
# tracking branch
;;
refs/remotes/*,delete)
# delete tracking branch
if [ "$allowdeletebranch" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** Deleting a tracking branch is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
*)
# Anything else (is there anything else?)
echo "*** Update hook: unknown type of update to ref $refname of type $newrev_type" >&2
exit 1
;;
esac
# --- Finished
exit 0
# git ls-files --others --exclude-from=.git/info/exclude
# Lines that start with '#' are comments.
# For a project mostly in C, the following would be a good set of
# exclude patterns (uncomment them if you want to use them):
# *.[oa]
# *~
git2:https://github.com/davecgh/go-spew
\ No newline at end of file
152484fe5c9ff65d013f0f372d748c03e8749e6d tag 'v1.1.1' of https://github.com/davecgh/go-spew
[core]
repositoryformatversion = 0
filemode = true
bare = true
ignorecase = true
precomposeunicode = true
[remote "origin"]
url = https://github.com/davecgh/go-spew
fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/*
Unnamed repository; edit this file 'description' to name the repository.
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to check the commit log message taken by
# applypatch from an e-mail message.
#
# The hook should exit with non-zero status after issuing an
# appropriate message if it wants to stop the commit. The hook is
# allowed to edit the commit message file.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "applypatch-msg".
. git-sh-setup
commitmsg="$(git rev-parse --git-path hooks/commit-msg)"
test -x "$commitmsg" && exec "$commitmsg" ${1+"$@"}
:
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to check the commit log message.
# Called by "git commit" with one argument, the name of the file
# that has the commit message. The hook should exit with non-zero
# status after issuing an appropriate message if it wants to stop the
# commit. The hook is allowed to edit the commit message file.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "commit-msg".
# Uncomment the below to add a Signed-off-by line to the message.
# Doing this in a hook is a bad idea in general, but the prepare-commit-msg
# hook is more suited to it.
#
# SOB=$(git var GIT_AUTHOR_IDENT | sed -n 's/^\(.*>\).*$/Signed-off-by: \1/p')
# grep -qs "^$SOB" "$1" || echo "$SOB" >> "$1"
# This example catches duplicate Signed-off-by lines.
test "" = "$(grep '^Signed-off-by: ' "$1" |
sort | uniq -c | sed -e '/^[ ]*1[ ]/d')" || {
echo >&2 Duplicate Signed-off-by lines.
exit 1
}
#!/usr/bin/perl
use strict;
use warnings;
use IPC::Open2;
# An example hook script to integrate Watchman
# (https://facebook.github.io/watchman/) with git to speed up detecting
# new and modified files.
#
# The hook is passed a version (currently 1) and a time in nanoseconds
# formatted as a string and outputs to stdout all files that have been
# modified since the given time. Paths must be relative to the root of
# the working tree and separated by a single NUL.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "query-watchman" and set
# 'git config core.fsmonitor .git/hooks/query-watchman'
#
my ($version, $time) = @ARGV;
# Check the hook interface version
if ($version == 1) {
# convert nanoseconds to seconds
$time = int $time / 1000000000;
} else {
die "Unsupported query-fsmonitor hook version '$version'.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n";
}
my $git_work_tree;
if ($^O =~ 'msys' || $^O =~ 'cygwin') {
$git_work_tree = Win32::GetCwd();
$git_work_tree =~ tr/\\/\//;
} else {
require Cwd;
$git_work_tree = Cwd::cwd();
}
my $retry = 1;
launch_watchman();
sub launch_watchman {
my $pid = open2(\*CHLD_OUT, \*CHLD_IN, 'watchman -j --no-pretty')
or die "open2() failed: $!\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n";
# In the query expression below we're asking for names of files that
# changed since $time but were not transient (ie created after
# $time but no longer exist).
#
# To accomplish this, we're using the "since" generator to use the
# recency index to select candidate nodes and "fields" to limit the
# output to file names only. Then we're using the "expression" term to
# further constrain the results.
#
# The category of transient files that we want to ignore will have a
# creation clock (cclock) newer than $time_t value and will also not
# currently exist.
my $query = <<" END";
["query", "$git_work_tree", {
"since": $time,
"fields": ["name"],
"expression": ["not", ["allof", ["since", $time, "cclock"], ["not", "exists"]]]
}]
END
print CHLD_IN $query;
close CHLD_IN;
my $response = do {local $/; <CHLD_OUT>};
die "Watchman: command returned no output.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" if $response eq "";
die "Watchman: command returned invalid output: $response\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" unless $response =~ /^\{/;
my $json_pkg;
eval {
require JSON::XS;
$json_pkg = "JSON::XS";
1;
} or do {
require JSON::PP;
$json_pkg = "JSON::PP";
};
my $o = $json_pkg->new->utf8->decode($response);
if ($retry > 0 and $o->{error} and $o->{error} =~ m/unable to resolve root .* directory (.*) is not watched/) {
print STDERR "Adding '$git_work_tree' to watchman's watch list.\n";
$retry--;
qx/watchman watch "$git_work_tree"/;
die "Failed to make watchman watch '$git_work_tree'.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" if $? != 0;
# Watchman will always return all files on the first query so
# return the fast "everything is dirty" flag to git and do the
# Watchman query just to get it over with now so we won't pay
# the cost in git to look up each individual file.
print "/\0";
eval { launch_watchman() };
exit 0;
}
die "Watchman: $o->{error}.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" if $o->{error};
binmode STDOUT, ":utf8";
local $, = "\0";
print @{$o->{files}};
}
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to prepare a packed repository for use over
# dumb transports.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "post-update".
exec git update-server-info
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to verify what is about to be committed
# by applypatch from an e-mail message.
#
# The hook should exit with non-zero status after issuing an
# appropriate message if it wants to stop the commit.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "pre-applypatch".
. git-sh-setup
precommit="$(git rev-parse --git-path hooks/pre-commit)"
test -x "$precommit" && exec "$precommit" ${1+"$@"}
:
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to verify what is about to be committed.
# Called by "git commit" with no arguments. The hook should
# exit with non-zero status after issuing an appropriate message if
# it wants to stop the commit.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "pre-commit".
if git rev-parse --verify HEAD >/dev/null 2>&1
then
against=HEAD
else
# Initial commit: diff against an empty tree object
against=4b825dc642cb6eb9a060e54bf8d69288fbee4904
fi
# If you want to allow non-ASCII filenames set this variable to true.
allownonascii=$(git config --bool hooks.allownonascii)
# Redirect output to stderr.
exec 1>&2
# Cross platform projects tend to avoid non-ASCII filenames; prevent
# them from being added to the repository. We exploit the fact that the
# printable range starts at the space character and ends with tilde.
if [ "$allownonascii" != "true" ] &&
# Note that the use of brackets around a tr range is ok here, (it's
# even required, for portability to Solaris 10's /usr/bin/tr), since
# the square bracket bytes happen to fall in the designated range.
test $(git diff --cached --name-only --diff-filter=A -z $against |
LC_ALL=C tr -d '[ -~]\0' | wc -c) != 0
then
cat <<\EOF
Error: Attempt to add a non-ASCII file name.
This can cause problems if you want to work with people on other platforms.
To be portable it is advisable to rename the file.
If you know what you are doing you can disable this check using:
git config hooks.allownonascii true
EOF
exit 1
fi
# If there are whitespace errors, print the offending file names and fail.
exec git diff-index --check --cached $against --
#!/bin/sh
# An example hook script to verify what is about to be pushed. Called by "git
# push" after it has checked the remote status, but before anything has been
# pushed. If this script exits with a non-zero status nothing will be pushed.
#
# This hook is called with the following parameters:
#
# $1 -- Name of the remote to which the push is being done
# $2 -- URL to which the push is being done
#
# If pushing without using a named remote those arguments will be equal.
#
# Information about the commits which are being pushed is supplied as lines to
# the standard input in the form:
#
# <local ref> <local sha1> <remote ref> <remote sha1>
#
# This sample shows how to prevent push of commits where the log message starts
# with "WIP" (work in progress).
remote="$1"
url="$2"
z40=0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
while read local_ref local_sha remote_ref remote_sha
do
if [ "$local_sha" = $z40 ]
then
# Handle delete
:
else
if [ "$remote_sha" = $z40 ]
then
# New branch, examine all commits
range="$local_sha"
else
# Update to existing branch, examine new commits
range="$remote_sha..$local_sha"
fi
# Check for WIP commit
commit=`git rev-list -n 1 --grep '^WIP' "$range"`
if [ -n "$commit" ]
then
echo >&2 "Found WIP commit in $local_ref, not pushing"
exit 1
fi
fi
done
exit 0
#!/bin/sh
#
# Copyright (c) 2006, 2008 Junio C Hamano
#
# The "pre-rebase" hook is run just before "git rebase" starts doing
# its job, and can prevent the command from running by exiting with
# non-zero status.
#
# The hook is called with the following parameters:
#
# $1 -- the upstream the series was forked from.
# $2 -- the branch being rebased (or empty when rebasing the current branch).
#
# This sample shows how to prevent topic branches that are already
# merged to 'next' branch from getting rebased, because allowing it
# would result in rebasing already published history.
publish=next
basebranch="$1"
if test "$#" = 2
then
topic="refs/heads/$2"
else
topic=`git symbolic-ref HEAD` ||
exit 0 ;# we do not interrupt rebasing detached HEAD
fi
case "$topic" in
refs/heads/??/*)
;;
*)
exit 0 ;# we do not interrupt others.
;;
esac
# Now we are dealing with a topic branch being rebased
# on top of master. Is it OK to rebase it?
# Does the topic really exist?
git show-ref -q "$topic" || {
echo >&2 "No such branch $topic"
exit 1
}
# Is topic fully merged to master?
not_in_master=`git rev-list --pretty=oneline ^master "$topic"`
if test -z "$not_in_master"
then
echo >&2 "$topic is fully merged to master; better remove it."
exit 1 ;# we could allow it, but there is no point.
fi
# Is topic ever merged to next? If so you should not be rebasing it.
only_next_1=`git rev-list ^master "^$topic" ${publish} | sort`
only_next_2=`git rev-list ^master ${publish} | sort`
if test "$only_next_1" = "$only_next_2"
then
not_in_topic=`git rev-list "^$topic" master`
if test -z "$not_in_topic"
then
echo >&2 "$topic is already up to date with master"
exit 1 ;# we could allow it, but there is no point.
else
exit 0
fi
else
not_in_next=`git rev-list --pretty=oneline ^${publish} "$topic"`
/usr/bin/perl -e '
my $topic = $ARGV[0];
my $msg = "* $topic has commits already merged to public branch:\n";
my (%not_in_next) = map {
/^([0-9a-f]+) /;
($1 => 1);
} split(/\n/, $ARGV[1]);
for my $elem (map {
/^([0-9a-f]+) (.*)$/;
[$1 => $2];
} split(/\n/, $ARGV[2])) {
if (!exists $not_in_next{$elem->[0]}) {
if ($msg) {
print STDERR $msg;
undef $msg;
}
print STDERR " $elem->[1]\n";
}
}
' "$topic" "$not_in_next" "$not_in_master"
exit 1
fi
<<\DOC_END
This sample hook safeguards topic branches that have been
published from being rewound.
The workflow assumed here is:
* Once a topic branch forks from "master", "master" is never
merged into it again (either directly or indirectly).
* Once a topic branch is fully cooked and merged into "master",
it is deleted. If you need to build on top of it to correct
earlier mistakes, a new topic branch is created by forking at
the tip of the "master". This is not strictly necessary, but
it makes it easier to keep your history simple.
* Whenever you need to test or publish your changes to topic
branches, merge them into "next" branch.
The script, being an example, hardcodes the publish branch name
to be "next", but it is trivial to make it configurable via
$GIT_DIR/config mechanism.
With this workflow, you would want to know:
(1) ... if a topic branch has ever been merged to "next". Young
topic branches can have stupid mistakes you would rather
clean up before publishing, and things that have not been
merged into other branches can be easily rebased without
affecting other people. But once it is published, you would
not want to rewind it.
(2) ... if a topic branch has been fully merged to "master".
Then you can delete it. More importantly, you should not
build on top of it -- other people may already want to
change things related to the topic as patches against your
"master", so if you need further changes, it is better to
fork the topic (perhaps with the same name) afresh from the
tip of "master".
Let's look at this example:
o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o "next"
/ / / /
/ a---a---b A / /
/ / / /
/ / c---c---c---c B /
/ / / \ /
/ / / b---b C \ /
/ / / / \ /
---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o "master"
A, B and C are topic branches.
* A has one fix since it was merged up to "next".
* B has finished. It has been fully merged up to "master" and "next",
and is ready to be deleted.
* C has not merged to "next" at all.
We would want to allow C to be rebased, refuse A, and encourage
B to be deleted.
To compute (1):
git rev-list ^master ^topic next
git rev-list ^master next
if these match, topic has not merged in next at all.
To compute (2):
git rev-list master..topic
if this is empty, it is fully merged to "master".
DOC_END
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to make use of push options.
# The example simply echoes all push options that start with 'echoback='
# and rejects all pushes when the "reject" push option is used.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "pre-receive".
if test -n "$GIT_PUSH_OPTION_COUNT"
then
i=0
while test "$i" -lt "$GIT_PUSH_OPTION_COUNT"
do
eval "value=\$GIT_PUSH_OPTION_$i"
case "$value" in
echoback=*)
echo "echo from the pre-receive-hook: ${value#*=}" >&2
;;
reject)
exit 1
esac
i=$((i + 1))
done
fi
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to prepare the commit log message.
# Called by "git commit" with the name of the file that has the
# commit message, followed by the description of the commit
# message's source. The hook's purpose is to edit the commit
# message file. If the hook fails with a non-zero status,
# the commit is aborted.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "prepare-commit-msg".
# This hook includes three examples. The first one removes the
# "# Please enter the commit message..." help message.
#
# The second includes the output of "git diff --name-status -r"
# into the message, just before the "git status" output. It is
# commented because it doesn't cope with --amend or with squashed
# commits.
#
# The third example adds a Signed-off-by line to the message, that can
# still be edited. This is rarely a good idea.
COMMIT_MSG_FILE=$1
COMMIT_SOURCE=$2
SHA1=$3
/usr/bin/perl -i.bak -ne 'print unless(m/^. Please enter the commit message/..m/^#$/)' "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE"
# case "$COMMIT_SOURCE,$SHA1" in
# ,|template,)
# /usr/bin/perl -i.bak -pe '
# print "\n" . `git diff --cached --name-status -r`
# if /^#/ && $first++ == 0' "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE" ;;
# *) ;;
# esac
# SOB=$(git var GIT_COMMITTER_IDENT | sed -n 's/^\(.*>\).*$/Signed-off-by: \1/p')
# git interpret-trailers --in-place --trailer "$SOB" "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE"
# if test -z "$COMMIT_SOURCE"
# then
# /usr/bin/perl -i.bak -pe 'print "\n" if !$first_line++' "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE"
# fi
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to block unannotated tags from entering.
# Called by "git receive-pack" with arguments: refname sha1-old sha1-new
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "update".
#
# Config
# ------
# hooks.allowunannotated
# This boolean sets whether unannotated tags will be allowed into the
# repository. By default they won't be.
# hooks.allowdeletetag
# This boolean sets whether deleting tags will be allowed in the
# repository. By default they won't be.
# hooks.allowmodifytag
# This boolean sets whether a tag may be modified after creation. By default
# it won't be.
# hooks.allowdeletebranch
# This boolean sets whether deleting branches will be allowed in the
# repository. By default they won't be.
# hooks.denycreatebranch
# This boolean sets whether remotely creating branches will be denied
# in the repository. By default this is allowed.
#
# --- Command line
refname="$1"
oldrev="$2"
newrev="$3"
# --- Safety check
if [ -z "$GIT_DIR" ]; then
echo "Don't run this script from the command line." >&2
echo " (if you want, you could supply GIT_DIR then run" >&2
echo " $0 <ref> <oldrev> <newrev>)" >&2
exit 1
fi
if [ -z "$refname" -o -z "$oldrev" -o -z "$newrev" ]; then
echo "usage: $0 <ref> <oldrev> <newrev>" >&2
exit 1
fi
# --- Config
allowunannotated=$(git config --bool hooks.allowunannotated)
allowdeletebranch=$(git config --bool hooks.allowdeletebranch)
denycreatebranch=$(git config --bool hooks.denycreatebranch)
allowdeletetag=$(git config --bool hooks.allowdeletetag)
allowmodifytag=$(git config --bool hooks.allowmodifytag)
# check for no description
projectdesc=$(sed -e '1q' "$GIT_DIR/description")
case "$projectdesc" in
"Unnamed repository"* | "")
echo "*** Project description file hasn't been set" >&2
exit 1
;;
esac
# --- Check types
# if $newrev is 0000...0000, it's a commit to delete a ref.
zero="0000000000000000000000000000000000000000"
if [ "$newrev" = "$zero" ]; then
newrev_type=delete
else
newrev_type=$(git cat-file -t $newrev)
fi
case "$refname","$newrev_type" in
refs/tags/*,commit)
# un-annotated tag
short_refname=${refname##refs/tags/}
if [ "$allowunannotated" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** The un-annotated tag, $short_refname, is not allowed in this repository" >&2
echo "*** Use 'git tag [ -a | -s ]' for tags you want to propagate." >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/tags/*,delete)
# delete tag
if [ "$allowdeletetag" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** Deleting a tag is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/tags/*,tag)
# annotated tag
if [ "$allowmodifytag" != "true" ] && git rev-parse $refname > /dev/null 2>&1
then
echo "*** Tag '$refname' already exists." >&2
echo "*** Modifying a tag is not allowed in this repository." >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/heads/*,commit)
# branch
if [ "$oldrev" = "$zero" -a "$denycreatebranch" = "true" ]; then
echo "*** Creating a branch is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/heads/*,delete)
# delete branch
if [ "$allowdeletebranch" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** Deleting a branch is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/remotes/*,commit)
# tracking branch
;;
refs/remotes/*,delete)
# delete tracking branch
if [ "$allowdeletebranch" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** Deleting a tracking branch is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
*)
# Anything else (is there anything else?)
echo "*** Update hook: unknown type of update to ref $refname of type $newrev_type" >&2
exit 1
;;
esac
# --- Finished
exit 0
# git ls-files --others --exclude-from=.git/info/exclude
# Lines that start with '#' are comments.
# For a project mostly in C, the following would be a good set of
# exclude patterns (uncomment them if you want to use them):
# *.[oa]
# *~
xuRMk0ٿbXBIBɥލ,e>4VBɏ8n&=?73 \]^Yj<qSNF sSս̨X ҄OL=Tr|VU|Js0H2>h$y]h N&!'5B*h&:~yh}xyz3ۻf3JKm-ba"f,}o,
08.fь 9u*߅eϢ|w "=:QfpdQ*AR'Hrr-m\V$*p-.H
(xG=(_ް\ɁئY)L8OI"ϳbik:UT"aFaCQf2+oW
\ No newline at end of file
x5MN0 `9/@IF :NR۠4eŧVEY",3yyŹ1Y'U9I' V'1% uEov+&X ^ҭu_g(uy&Zt&hx֨MRlz]v!t9uZ[ h,`~aK
\ No newline at end of file
xUP]o0ݳQ6e[i &Xr6HXJikۋrxepg:nP4Oy>n_81dl8M0L!Á2<m<t~Dy0℩?pǦ{ae)9'пt@Sc͡0SlCKjLG@K{tL%W=0fDМ)v ӊ1_ 8Sak͝,D+h׾28p@,˵±XsKxC{ֹ KnJ;daT/ƥZ8NhW%2
(o@i,n+rUFq}F/!7ډ5ipD;]Ž3hi+W+җl#t 2'*Fa]]%(Mf<&Soi̠ZɵйHDՅ[钣}*$HIKݩJ KoZ_B
\ No newline at end of file
git2:https://github.com/Shopify/sarama
\ No newline at end of file
879f631812a30a580659e8035e7cda9994bb99ac tag 'v1.20.0' of https://github.com/Shopify/sarama
[core]
repositoryformatversion = 0
filemode = true
bare = true
ignorecase = true
precomposeunicode = true
[remote "origin"]
url = https://github.com/Shopify/sarama
fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/*
Unnamed repository; edit this file 'description' to name the repository.
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to check the commit log message taken by
# applypatch from an e-mail message.
#
# The hook should exit with non-zero status after issuing an
# appropriate message if it wants to stop the commit. The hook is
# allowed to edit the commit message file.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "applypatch-msg".
. git-sh-setup
commitmsg="$(git rev-parse --git-path hooks/commit-msg)"
test -x "$commitmsg" && exec "$commitmsg" ${1+"$@"}
:
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to check the commit log message.
# Called by "git commit" with one argument, the name of the file
# that has the commit message. The hook should exit with non-zero
# status after issuing an appropriate message if it wants to stop the
# commit. The hook is allowed to edit the commit message file.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "commit-msg".
# Uncomment the below to add a Signed-off-by line to the message.
# Doing this in a hook is a bad idea in general, but the prepare-commit-msg
# hook is more suited to it.
#
# SOB=$(git var GIT_AUTHOR_IDENT | sed -n 's/^\(.*>\).*$/Signed-off-by: \1/p')
# grep -qs "^$SOB" "$1" || echo "$SOB" >> "$1"
# This example catches duplicate Signed-off-by lines.
test "" = "$(grep '^Signed-off-by: ' "$1" |
sort | uniq -c | sed -e '/^[ ]*1[ ]/d')" || {
echo >&2 Duplicate Signed-off-by lines.
exit 1
}
#!/usr/bin/perl
use strict;
use warnings;
use IPC::Open2;
# An example hook script to integrate Watchman
# (https://facebook.github.io/watchman/) with git to speed up detecting
# new and modified files.
#
# The hook is passed a version (currently 1) and a time in nanoseconds
# formatted as a string and outputs to stdout all files that have been
# modified since the given time. Paths must be relative to the root of
# the working tree and separated by a single NUL.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "query-watchman" and set
# 'git config core.fsmonitor .git/hooks/query-watchman'
#
my ($version, $time) = @ARGV;
# Check the hook interface version
if ($version == 1) {
# convert nanoseconds to seconds
$time = int $time / 1000000000;
} else {
die "Unsupported query-fsmonitor hook version '$version'.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n";
}
my $git_work_tree;
if ($^O =~ 'msys' || $^O =~ 'cygwin') {
$git_work_tree = Win32::GetCwd();
$git_work_tree =~ tr/\\/\//;
} else {
require Cwd;
$git_work_tree = Cwd::cwd();
}
my $retry = 1;
launch_watchman();
sub launch_watchman {
my $pid = open2(\*CHLD_OUT, \*CHLD_IN, 'watchman -j --no-pretty')
or die "open2() failed: $!\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n";
# In the query expression below we're asking for names of files that
# changed since $time but were not transient (ie created after
# $time but no longer exist).
#
# To accomplish this, we're using the "since" generator to use the
# recency index to select candidate nodes and "fields" to limit the
# output to file names only. Then we're using the "expression" term to
# further constrain the results.
#
# The category of transient files that we want to ignore will have a
# creation clock (cclock) newer than $time_t value and will also not
# currently exist.
my $query = <<" END";
["query", "$git_work_tree", {
"since": $time,
"fields": ["name"],
"expression": ["not", ["allof", ["since", $time, "cclock"], ["not", "exists"]]]
}]
END
print CHLD_IN $query;
close CHLD_IN;
my $response = do {local $/; <CHLD_OUT>};
die "Watchman: command returned no output.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" if $response eq "";
die "Watchman: command returned invalid output: $response\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" unless $response =~ /^\{/;
my $json_pkg;
eval {
require JSON::XS;
$json_pkg = "JSON::XS";
1;
} or do {
require JSON::PP;
$json_pkg = "JSON::PP";
};
my $o = $json_pkg->new->utf8->decode($response);
if ($retry > 0 and $o->{error} and $o->{error} =~ m/unable to resolve root .* directory (.*) is not watched/) {
print STDERR "Adding '$git_work_tree' to watchman's watch list.\n";
$retry--;
qx/watchman watch "$git_work_tree"/;
die "Failed to make watchman watch '$git_work_tree'.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" if $? != 0;
# Watchman will always return all files on the first query so
# return the fast "everything is dirty" flag to git and do the
# Watchman query just to get it over with now so we won't pay
# the cost in git to look up each individual file.
print "/\0";
eval { launch_watchman() };
exit 0;
}
die "Watchman: $o->{error}.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" if $o->{error};
binmode STDOUT, ":utf8";
local $, = "\0";
print @{$o->{files}};
}
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to prepare a packed repository for use over
# dumb transports.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "post-update".
exec git update-server-info
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to verify what is about to be committed
# by applypatch from an e-mail message.
#
# The hook should exit with non-zero status after issuing an
# appropriate message if it wants to stop the commit.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "pre-applypatch".
. git-sh-setup
precommit="$(git rev-parse --git-path hooks/pre-commit)"
test -x "$precommit" && exec "$precommit" ${1+"$@"}
:
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to verify what is about to be committed.
# Called by "git commit" with no arguments. The hook should
# exit with non-zero status after issuing an appropriate message if
# it wants to stop the commit.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "pre-commit".
if git rev-parse --verify HEAD >/dev/null 2>&1
then
against=HEAD
else
# Initial commit: diff against an empty tree object
against=4b825dc642cb6eb9a060e54bf8d69288fbee4904
fi
# If you want to allow non-ASCII filenames set this variable to true.
allownonascii=$(git config --bool hooks.allownonascii)
# Redirect output to stderr.
exec 1>&2
# Cross platform projects tend to avoid non-ASCII filenames; prevent
# them from being added to the repository. We exploit the fact that the
# printable range starts at the space character and ends with tilde.
if [ "$allownonascii" != "true" ] &&
# Note that the use of brackets around a tr range is ok here, (it's
# even required, for portability to Solaris 10's /usr/bin/tr), since
# the square bracket bytes happen to fall in the designated range.
test $(git diff --cached --name-only --diff-filter=A -z $against |
LC_ALL=C tr -d '[ -~]\0' | wc -c) != 0
then
cat <<\EOF
Error: Attempt to add a non-ASCII file name.
This can cause problems if you want to work with people on other platforms.
To be portable it is advisable to rename the file.
If you know what you are doing you can disable this check using:
git config hooks.allownonascii true
EOF
exit 1
fi
# If there are whitespace errors, print the offending file names and fail.
exec git diff-index --check --cached $against --
#!/bin/sh
# An example hook script to verify what is about to be pushed. Called by "git
# push" after it has checked the remote status, but before anything has been
# pushed. If this script exits with a non-zero status nothing will be pushed.
#
# This hook is called with the following parameters:
#
# $1 -- Name of the remote to which the push is being done
# $2 -- URL to which the push is being done
#
# If pushing without using a named remote those arguments will be equal.
#
# Information about the commits which are being pushed is supplied as lines to
# the standard input in the form:
#
# <local ref> <local sha1> <remote ref> <remote sha1>
#
# This sample shows how to prevent push of commits where the log message starts
# with "WIP" (work in progress).
remote="$1"
url="$2"
z40=0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
while read local_ref local_sha remote_ref remote_sha
do
if [ "$local_sha" = $z40 ]
then
# Handle delete
:
else
if [ "$remote_sha" = $z40 ]
then
# New branch, examine all commits
range="$local_sha"
else
# Update to existing branch, examine new commits
range="$remote_sha..$local_sha"
fi
# Check for WIP commit
commit=`git rev-list -n 1 --grep '^WIP' "$range"`
if [ -n "$commit" ]
then
echo >&2 "Found WIP commit in $local_ref, not pushing"
exit 1
fi
fi
done
exit 0
#!/bin/sh
#
# Copyright (c) 2006, 2008 Junio C Hamano
#
# The "pre-rebase" hook is run just before "git rebase" starts doing
# its job, and can prevent the command from running by exiting with
# non-zero status.
#
# The hook is called with the following parameters:
#
# $1 -- the upstream the series was forked from.
# $2 -- the branch being rebased (or empty when rebasing the current branch).
#
# This sample shows how to prevent topic branches that are already
# merged to 'next' branch from getting rebased, because allowing it
# would result in rebasing already published history.
publish=next
basebranch="$1"
if test "$#" = 2
then
topic="refs/heads/$2"
else
topic=`git symbolic-ref HEAD` ||
exit 0 ;# we do not interrupt rebasing detached HEAD
fi
case "$topic" in
refs/heads/??/*)
;;
*)
exit 0 ;# we do not interrupt others.
;;
esac
# Now we are dealing with a topic branch being rebased
# on top of master. Is it OK to rebase it?
# Does the topic really exist?
git show-ref -q "$topic" || {
echo >&2 "No such branch $topic"
exit 1
}
# Is topic fully merged to master?
not_in_master=`git rev-list --pretty=oneline ^master "$topic"`
if test -z "$not_in_master"
then
echo >&2 "$topic is fully merged to master; better remove it."
exit 1 ;# we could allow it, but there is no point.
fi
# Is topic ever merged to next? If so you should not be rebasing it.
only_next_1=`git rev-list ^master "^$topic" ${publish} | sort`
only_next_2=`git rev-list ^master ${publish} | sort`
if test "$only_next_1" = "$only_next_2"
then
not_in_topic=`git rev-list "^$topic" master`
if test -z "$not_in_topic"
then
echo >&2 "$topic is already up to date with master"
exit 1 ;# we could allow it, but there is no point.
else
exit 0
fi
else
not_in_next=`git rev-list --pretty=oneline ^${publish} "$topic"`
/usr/bin/perl -e '
my $topic = $ARGV[0];
my $msg = "* $topic has commits already merged to public branch:\n";
my (%not_in_next) = map {
/^([0-9a-f]+) /;
($1 => 1);
} split(/\n/, $ARGV[1]);
for my $elem (map {
/^([0-9a-f]+) (.*)$/;
[$1 => $2];
} split(/\n/, $ARGV[2])) {
if (!exists $not_in_next{$elem->[0]}) {
if ($msg) {
print STDERR $msg;
undef $msg;
}
print STDERR " $elem->[1]\n";
}
}
' "$topic" "$not_in_next" "$not_in_master"
exit 1
fi
<<\DOC_END
This sample hook safeguards topic branches that have been
published from being rewound.
The workflow assumed here is:
* Once a topic branch forks from "master", "master" is never
merged into it again (either directly or indirectly).
* Once a topic branch is fully cooked and merged into "master",
it is deleted. If you need to build on top of it to correct
earlier mistakes, a new topic branch is created by forking at
the tip of the "master". This is not strictly necessary, but
it makes it easier to keep your history simple.
* Whenever you need to test or publish your changes to topic
branches, merge them into "next" branch.
The script, being an example, hardcodes the publish branch name
to be "next", but it is trivial to make it configurable via
$GIT_DIR/config mechanism.
With this workflow, you would want to know:
(1) ... if a topic branch has ever been merged to "next". Young
topic branches can have stupid mistakes you would rather
clean up before publishing, and things that have not been
merged into other branches can be easily rebased without
affecting other people. But once it is published, you would
not want to rewind it.
(2) ... if a topic branch has been fully merged to "master".
Then you can delete it. More importantly, you should not
build on top of it -- other people may already want to
change things related to the topic as patches against your
"master", so if you need further changes, it is better to
fork the topic (perhaps with the same name) afresh from the
tip of "master".
Let's look at this example:
o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o "next"
/ / / /
/ a---a---b A / /
/ / / /
/ / c---c---c---c B /
/ / / \ /
/ / / b---b C \ /
/ / / / \ /
---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o "master"
A, B and C are topic branches.
* A has one fix since it was merged up to "next".
* B has finished. It has been fully merged up to "master" and "next",
and is ready to be deleted.
* C has not merged to "next" at all.
We would want to allow C to be rebased, refuse A, and encourage
B to be deleted.
To compute (1):
git rev-list ^master ^topic next
git rev-list ^master next
if these match, topic has not merged in next at all.
To compute (2):
git rev-list master..topic
if this is empty, it is fully merged to "master".
DOC_END
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to make use of push options.
# The example simply echoes all push options that start with 'echoback='
# and rejects all pushes when the "reject" push option is used.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "pre-receive".
if test -n "$GIT_PUSH_OPTION_COUNT"
then
i=0
while test "$i" -lt "$GIT_PUSH_OPTION_COUNT"
do
eval "value=\$GIT_PUSH_OPTION_$i"
case "$value" in
echoback=*)
echo "echo from the pre-receive-hook: ${value#*=}" >&2
;;
reject)
exit 1
esac
i=$((i + 1))
done
fi
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to prepare the commit log message.
# Called by "git commit" with the name of the file that has the
# commit message, followed by the description of the commit
# message's source. The hook's purpose is to edit the commit
# message file. If the hook fails with a non-zero status,
# the commit is aborted.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "prepare-commit-msg".
# This hook includes three examples. The first one removes the
# "# Please enter the commit message..." help message.
#
# The second includes the output of "git diff --name-status -r"
# into the message, just before the "git status" output. It is
# commented because it doesn't cope with --amend or with squashed
# commits.
#
# The third example adds a Signed-off-by line to the message, that can
# still be edited. This is rarely a good idea.
COMMIT_MSG_FILE=$1
COMMIT_SOURCE=$2
SHA1=$3
/usr/bin/perl -i.bak -ne 'print unless(m/^. Please enter the commit message/..m/^#$/)' "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE"
# case "$COMMIT_SOURCE,$SHA1" in
# ,|template,)
# /usr/bin/perl -i.bak -pe '
# print "\n" . `git diff --cached --name-status -r`
# if /^#/ && $first++ == 0' "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE" ;;
# *) ;;
# esac
# SOB=$(git var GIT_COMMITTER_IDENT | sed -n 's/^\(.*>\).*$/Signed-off-by: \1/p')
# git interpret-trailers --in-place --trailer "$SOB" "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE"
# if test -z "$COMMIT_SOURCE"
# then
# /usr/bin/perl -i.bak -pe 'print "\n" if !$first_line++' "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE"
# fi
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to block unannotated tags from entering.
# Called by "git receive-pack" with arguments: refname sha1-old sha1-new
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "update".
#
# Config
# ------
# hooks.allowunannotated
# This boolean sets whether unannotated tags will be allowed into the
# repository. By default they won't be.
# hooks.allowdeletetag
# This boolean sets whether deleting tags will be allowed in the
# repository. By default they won't be.
# hooks.allowmodifytag
# This boolean sets whether a tag may be modified after creation. By default
# it won't be.
# hooks.allowdeletebranch
# This boolean sets whether deleting branches will be allowed in the
# repository. By default they won't be.
# hooks.denycreatebranch
# This boolean sets whether remotely creating branches will be denied
# in the repository. By default this is allowed.
#
# --- Command line
refname="$1"
oldrev="$2"
newrev="$3"
# --- Safety check
if [ -z "$GIT_DIR" ]; then
echo "Don't run this script from the command line." >&2
echo " (if you want, you could supply GIT_DIR then run" >&2
echo " $0 <ref> <oldrev> <newrev>)" >&2
exit 1
fi
if [ -z "$refname" -o -z "$oldrev" -o -z "$newrev" ]; then
echo "usage: $0 <ref> <oldrev> <newrev>" >&2
exit 1
fi
# --- Config
allowunannotated=$(git config --bool hooks.allowunannotated)
allowdeletebranch=$(git config --bool hooks.allowdeletebranch)
denycreatebranch=$(git config --bool hooks.denycreatebranch)
allowdeletetag=$(git config --bool hooks.allowdeletetag)
allowmodifytag=$(git config --bool hooks.allowmodifytag)
# check for no description
projectdesc=$(sed -e '1q' "$GIT_DIR/description")
case "$projectdesc" in
"Unnamed repository"* | "")
echo "*** Project description file hasn't been set" >&2
exit 1
;;
esac
# --- Check types
# if $newrev is 0000...0000, it's a commit to delete a ref.
zero="0000000000000000000000000000000000000000"
if [ "$newrev" = "$zero" ]; then
newrev_type=delete
else
newrev_type=$(git cat-file -t $newrev)
fi
case "$refname","$newrev_type" in
refs/tags/*,commit)
# un-annotated tag
short_refname=${refname##refs/tags/}
if [ "$allowunannotated" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** The un-annotated tag, $short_refname, is not allowed in this repository" >&2
echo "*** Use 'git tag [ -a | -s ]' for tags you want to propagate." >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/tags/*,delete)
# delete tag
if [ "$allowdeletetag" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** Deleting a tag is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/tags/*,tag)
# annotated tag
if [ "$allowmodifytag" != "true" ] && git rev-parse $refname > /dev/null 2>&1
then
echo "*** Tag '$refname' already exists." >&2
echo "*** Modifying a tag is not allowed in this repository." >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/heads/*,commit)
# branch
if [ "$oldrev" = "$zero" -a "$denycreatebranch" = "true" ]; then
echo "*** Creating a branch is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/heads/*,delete)
# delete branch
if [ "$allowdeletebranch" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** Deleting a branch is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/remotes/*,commit)
# tracking branch
;;
refs/remotes/*,delete)
# delete tracking branch
if [ "$allowdeletebranch" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** Deleting a tracking branch is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
*)
# Anything else (is there anything else?)
echo "*** Update hook: unknown type of update to ref $refname of type $newrev_type" >&2
exit 1
;;
esac
# --- Finished
exit 0
# git ls-files --others --exclude-from=.git/info/exclude
# Lines that start with '#' are comments.
# For a project mostly in C, the following would be a good set of
# exclude patterns (uncomment them if you want to use them):
# *.[oa]
# *~
git2:https://github.com/eapache/go-xerial-snappy
\ No newline at end of file
776d5712da21bc4762676d614db1d8a64f4238b0 '776d5712da21bc4762676d614db1d8a64f4238b0' of https://github.com/eapache/go-xerial-snappy
[core]
repositoryformatversion = 0
filemode = true
bare = true
ignorecase = true
precomposeunicode = true
[remote "origin"]
url = https://github.com/eapache/go-xerial-snappy
fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/*
Unnamed repository; edit this file 'description' to name the repository.
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to check the commit log message taken by
# applypatch from an e-mail message.
#
# The hook should exit with non-zero status after issuing an
# appropriate message if it wants to stop the commit. The hook is
# allowed to edit the commit message file.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "applypatch-msg".
. git-sh-setup
commitmsg="$(git rev-parse --git-path hooks/commit-msg)"
test -x "$commitmsg" && exec "$commitmsg" ${1+"$@"}
:
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to check the commit log message.
# Called by "git commit" with one argument, the name of the file
# that has the commit message. The hook should exit with non-zero
# status after issuing an appropriate message if it wants to stop the
# commit. The hook is allowed to edit the commit message file.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "commit-msg".
# Uncomment the below to add a Signed-off-by line to the message.
# Doing this in a hook is a bad idea in general, but the prepare-commit-msg
# hook is more suited to it.
#
# SOB=$(git var GIT_AUTHOR_IDENT | sed -n 's/^\(.*>\).*$/Signed-off-by: \1/p')
# grep -qs "^$SOB" "$1" || echo "$SOB" >> "$1"
# This example catches duplicate Signed-off-by lines.
test "" = "$(grep '^Signed-off-by: ' "$1" |
sort | uniq -c | sed -e '/^[ ]*1[ ]/d')" || {
echo >&2 Duplicate Signed-off-by lines.
exit 1
}
#!/usr/bin/perl
use strict;
use warnings;
use IPC::Open2;
# An example hook script to integrate Watchman
# (https://facebook.github.io/watchman/) with git to speed up detecting
# new and modified files.
#
# The hook is passed a version (currently 1) and a time in nanoseconds
# formatted as a string and outputs to stdout all files that have been
# modified since the given time. Paths must be relative to the root of
# the working tree and separated by a single NUL.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "query-watchman" and set
# 'git config core.fsmonitor .git/hooks/query-watchman'
#
my ($version, $time) = @ARGV;
# Check the hook interface version
if ($version == 1) {
# convert nanoseconds to seconds
$time = int $time / 1000000000;
} else {
die "Unsupported query-fsmonitor hook version '$version'.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n";
}
my $git_work_tree;
if ($^O =~ 'msys' || $^O =~ 'cygwin') {
$git_work_tree = Win32::GetCwd();
$git_work_tree =~ tr/\\/\//;
} else {
require Cwd;
$git_work_tree = Cwd::cwd();
}
my $retry = 1;
launch_watchman();
sub launch_watchman {
my $pid = open2(\*CHLD_OUT, \*CHLD_IN, 'watchman -j --no-pretty')
or die "open2() failed: $!\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n";
# In the query expression below we're asking for names of files that
# changed since $time but were not transient (ie created after
# $time but no longer exist).
#
# To accomplish this, we're using the "since" generator to use the
# recency index to select candidate nodes and "fields" to limit the
# output to file names only. Then we're using the "expression" term to
# further constrain the results.
#
# The category of transient files that we want to ignore will have a
# creation clock (cclock) newer than $time_t value and will also not
# currently exist.
my $query = <<" END";
["query", "$git_work_tree", {
"since": $time,
"fields": ["name"],
"expression": ["not", ["allof", ["since", $time, "cclock"], ["not", "exists"]]]
}]
END
print CHLD_IN $query;
close CHLD_IN;
my $response = do {local $/; <CHLD_OUT>};
die "Watchman: command returned no output.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" if $response eq "";
die "Watchman: command returned invalid output: $response\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" unless $response =~ /^\{/;
my $json_pkg;
eval {
require JSON::XS;
$json_pkg = "JSON::XS";
1;
} or do {
require JSON::PP;
$json_pkg = "JSON::PP";
};
my $o = $json_pkg->new->utf8->decode($response);
if ($retry > 0 and $o->{error} and $o->{error} =~ m/unable to resolve root .* directory (.*) is not watched/) {
print STDERR "Adding '$git_work_tree' to watchman's watch list.\n";
$retry--;
qx/watchman watch "$git_work_tree"/;
die "Failed to make watchman watch '$git_work_tree'.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" if $? != 0;
# Watchman will always return all files on the first query so
# return the fast "everything is dirty" flag to git and do the
# Watchman query just to get it over with now so we won't pay
# the cost in git to look up each individual file.
print "/\0";
eval { launch_watchman() };
exit 0;
}
die "Watchman: $o->{error}.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" if $o->{error};
binmode STDOUT, ":utf8";
local $, = "\0";
print @{$o->{files}};
}
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to prepare a packed repository for use over
# dumb transports.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "post-update".
exec git update-server-info
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to verify what is about to be committed
# by applypatch from an e-mail message.
#
# The hook should exit with non-zero status after issuing an
# appropriate message if it wants to stop the commit.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "pre-applypatch".
. git-sh-setup
precommit="$(git rev-parse --git-path hooks/pre-commit)"
test -x "$precommit" && exec "$precommit" ${1+"$@"}
:
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to verify what is about to be committed.
# Called by "git commit" with no arguments. The hook should
# exit with non-zero status after issuing an appropriate message if
# it wants to stop the commit.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "pre-commit".
if git rev-parse --verify HEAD >/dev/null 2>&1
then
against=HEAD
else
# Initial commit: diff against an empty tree object
against=4b825dc642cb6eb9a060e54bf8d69288fbee4904
fi
# If you want to allow non-ASCII filenames set this variable to true.
allownonascii=$(git config --bool hooks.allownonascii)
# Redirect output to stderr.
exec 1>&2
# Cross platform projects tend to avoid non-ASCII filenames; prevent
# them from being added to the repository. We exploit the fact that the
# printable range starts at the space character and ends with tilde.
if [ "$allownonascii" != "true" ] &&
# Note that the use of brackets around a tr range is ok here, (it's
# even required, for portability to Solaris 10's /usr/bin/tr), since
# the square bracket bytes happen to fall in the designated range.
test $(git diff --cached --name-only --diff-filter=A -z $against |
LC_ALL=C tr -d '[ -~]\0' | wc -c) != 0
then
cat <<\EOF
Error: Attempt to add a non-ASCII file name.
This can cause problems if you want to work with people on other platforms.
To be portable it is advisable to rename the file.
If you know what you are doing you can disable this check using:
git config hooks.allownonascii true
EOF
exit 1
fi
# If there are whitespace errors, print the offending file names and fail.
exec git diff-index --check --cached $against --
#!/bin/sh
# An example hook script to verify what is about to be pushed. Called by "git
# push" after it has checked the remote status, but before anything has been
# pushed. If this script exits with a non-zero status nothing will be pushed.
#
# This hook is called with the following parameters:
#
# $1 -- Name of the remote to which the push is being done
# $2 -- URL to which the push is being done
#
# If pushing without using a named remote those arguments will be equal.
#
# Information about the commits which are being pushed is supplied as lines to
# the standard input in the form:
#
# <local ref> <local sha1> <remote ref> <remote sha1>
#
# This sample shows how to prevent push of commits where the log message starts
# with "WIP" (work in progress).
remote="$1"
url="$2"
z40=0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
while read local_ref local_sha remote_ref remote_sha
do
if [ "$local_sha" = $z40 ]
then
# Handle delete
:
else
if [ "$remote_sha" = $z40 ]
then
# New branch, examine all commits
range="$local_sha"
else
# Update to existing branch, examine new commits
range="$remote_sha..$local_sha"
fi
# Check for WIP commit
commit=`git rev-list -n 1 --grep '^WIP' "$range"`
if [ -n "$commit" ]
then
echo >&2 "Found WIP commit in $local_ref, not pushing"
exit 1
fi
fi
done
exit 0
#!/bin/sh
#
# Copyright (c) 2006, 2008 Junio C Hamano
#
# The "pre-rebase" hook is run just before "git rebase" starts doing
# its job, and can prevent the command from running by exiting with
# non-zero status.
#
# The hook is called with the following parameters:
#
# $1 -- the upstream the series was forked from.
# $2 -- the branch being rebased (or empty when rebasing the current branch).
#
# This sample shows how to prevent topic branches that are already
# merged to 'next' branch from getting rebased, because allowing it
# would result in rebasing already published history.
publish=next
basebranch="$1"
if test "$#" = 2
then
topic="refs/heads/$2"
else
topic=`git symbolic-ref HEAD` ||
exit 0 ;# we do not interrupt rebasing detached HEAD
fi
case "$topic" in
refs/heads/??/*)
;;
*)
exit 0 ;# we do not interrupt others.
;;
esac
# Now we are dealing with a topic branch being rebased
# on top of master. Is it OK to rebase it?
# Does the topic really exist?
git show-ref -q "$topic" || {
echo >&2 "No such branch $topic"
exit 1
}
# Is topic fully merged to master?
not_in_master=`git rev-list --pretty=oneline ^master "$topic"`
if test -z "$not_in_master"
then
echo >&2 "$topic is fully merged to master; better remove it."
exit 1 ;# we could allow it, but there is no point.
fi
# Is topic ever merged to next? If so you should not be rebasing it.
only_next_1=`git rev-list ^master "^$topic" ${publish} | sort`
only_next_2=`git rev-list ^master ${publish} | sort`
if test "$only_next_1" = "$only_next_2"
then
not_in_topic=`git rev-list "^$topic" master`
if test -z "$not_in_topic"
then
echo >&2 "$topic is already up to date with master"
exit 1 ;# we could allow it, but there is no point.
else
exit 0
fi
else
not_in_next=`git rev-list --pretty=oneline ^${publish} "$topic"`
/usr/bin/perl -e '
my $topic = $ARGV[0];
my $msg = "* $topic has commits already merged to public branch:\n";
my (%not_in_next) = map {
/^([0-9a-f]+) /;
($1 => 1);
} split(/\n/, $ARGV[1]);
for my $elem (map {
/^([0-9a-f]+) (.*)$/;
[$1 => $2];
} split(/\n/, $ARGV[2])) {
if (!exists $not_in_next{$elem->[0]}) {
if ($msg) {
print STDERR $msg;
undef $msg;
}
print STDERR " $elem->[1]\n";
}
}
' "$topic" "$not_in_next" "$not_in_master"
exit 1
fi
<<\DOC_END
This sample hook safeguards topic branches that have been
published from being rewound.
The workflow assumed here is:
* Once a topic branch forks from "master", "master" is never
merged into it again (either directly or indirectly).
* Once a topic branch is fully cooked and merged into "master",
it is deleted. If you need to build on top of it to correct
earlier mistakes, a new topic branch is created by forking at
the tip of the "master". This is not strictly necessary, but
it makes it easier to keep your history simple.
* Whenever you need to test or publish your changes to topic
branches, merge them into "next" branch.
The script, being an example, hardcodes the publish branch name
to be "next", but it is trivial to make it configurable via
$GIT_DIR/config mechanism.
With this workflow, you would want to know:
(1) ... if a topic branch has ever been merged to "next". Young
topic branches can have stupid mistakes you would rather
clean up before publishing, and things that have not been
merged into other branches can be easily rebased without
affecting other people. But once it is published, you would
not want to rewind it.
(2) ... if a topic branch has been fully merged to "master".
Then you can delete it. More importantly, you should not
build on top of it -- other people may already want to
change things related to the topic as patches against your
"master", so if you need further changes, it is better to
fork the topic (perhaps with the same name) afresh from the
tip of "master".
Let's look at this example:
o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o "next"
/ / / /
/ a---a---b A / /
/ / / /
/ / c---c---c---c B /
/ / / \ /
/ / / b---b C \ /
/ / / / \ /
---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o "master"
A, B and C are topic branches.
* A has one fix since it was merged up to "next".
* B has finished. It has been fully merged up to "master" and "next",
and is ready to be deleted.
* C has not merged to "next" at all.
We would want to allow C to be rebased, refuse A, and encourage
B to be deleted.
To compute (1):
git rev-list ^master ^topic next
git rev-list ^master next
if these match, topic has not merged in next at all.
To compute (2):
git rev-list master..topic
if this is empty, it is fully merged to "master".
DOC_END
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to make use of push options.
# The example simply echoes all push options that start with 'echoback='
# and rejects all pushes when the "reject" push option is used.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "pre-receive".
if test -n "$GIT_PUSH_OPTION_COUNT"
then
i=0
while test "$i" -lt "$GIT_PUSH_OPTION_COUNT"
do
eval "value=\$GIT_PUSH_OPTION_$i"
case "$value" in
echoback=*)
echo "echo from the pre-receive-hook: ${value#*=}" >&2
;;
reject)
exit 1
esac
i=$((i + 1))
done
fi
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to prepare the commit log message.
# Called by "git commit" with the name of the file that has the
# commit message, followed by the description of the commit
# message's source. The hook's purpose is to edit the commit
# message file. If the hook fails with a non-zero status,
# the commit is aborted.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "prepare-commit-msg".
# This hook includes three examples. The first one removes the
# "# Please enter the commit message..." help message.
#
# The second includes the output of "git diff --name-status -r"
# into the message, just before the "git status" output. It is
# commented because it doesn't cope with --amend or with squashed
# commits.
#
# The third example adds a Signed-off-by line to the message, that can
# still be edited. This is rarely a good idea.
COMMIT_MSG_FILE=$1
COMMIT_SOURCE=$2
SHA1=$3
/usr/bin/perl -i.bak -ne 'print unless(m/^. Please enter the commit message/..m/^#$/)' "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE"
# case "$COMMIT_SOURCE,$SHA1" in
# ,|template,)
# /usr/bin/perl -i.bak -pe '
# print "\n" . `git diff --cached --name-status -r`
# if /^#/ && $first++ == 0' "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE" ;;
# *) ;;
# esac
# SOB=$(git var GIT_COMMITTER_IDENT | sed -n 's/^\(.*>\).*$/Signed-off-by: \1/p')
# git interpret-trailers --in-place --trailer "$SOB" "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE"
# if test -z "$COMMIT_SOURCE"
# then
# /usr/bin/perl -i.bak -pe 'print "\n" if !$first_line++' "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE"
# fi
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to block unannotated tags from entering.
# Called by "git receive-pack" with arguments: refname sha1-old sha1-new
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "update".
#
# Config
# ------
# hooks.allowunannotated
# This boolean sets whether unannotated tags will be allowed into the
# repository. By default they won't be.
# hooks.allowdeletetag
# This boolean sets whether deleting tags will be allowed in the
# repository. By default they won't be.
# hooks.allowmodifytag
# This boolean sets whether a tag may be modified after creation. By default
# it won't be.
# hooks.allowdeletebranch
# This boolean sets whether deleting branches will be allowed in the
# repository. By default they won't be.
# hooks.denycreatebranch
# This boolean sets whether remotely creating branches will be denied
# in the repository. By default this is allowed.
#
# --- Command line
refname="$1"
oldrev="$2"
newrev="$3"
# --- Safety check
if [ -z "$GIT_DIR" ]; then
echo "Don't run this script from the command line." >&2
echo " (if you want, you could supply GIT_DIR then run" >&2
echo " $0 <ref> <oldrev> <newrev>)" >&2
exit 1
fi
if [ -z "$refname" -o -z "$oldrev" -o -z "$newrev" ]; then
echo "usage: $0 <ref> <oldrev> <newrev>" >&2
exit 1
fi
# --- Config
allowunannotated=$(git config --bool hooks.allowunannotated)
allowdeletebranch=$(git config --bool hooks.allowdeletebranch)
denycreatebranch=$(git config --bool hooks.denycreatebranch)
allowdeletetag=$(git config --bool hooks.allowdeletetag)
allowmodifytag=$(git config --bool hooks.allowmodifytag)
# check for no description
projectdesc=$(sed -e '1q' "$GIT_DIR/description")
case "$projectdesc" in
"Unnamed repository"* | "")
echo "*** Project description file hasn't been set" >&2
exit 1
;;
esac
# --- Check types
# if $newrev is 0000...0000, it's a commit to delete a ref.
zero="0000000000000000000000000000000000000000"
if [ "$newrev" = "$zero" ]; then
newrev_type=delete
else
newrev_type=$(git cat-file -t $newrev)
fi
case "$refname","$newrev_type" in
refs/tags/*,commit)
# un-annotated tag
short_refname=${refname##refs/tags/}
if [ "$allowunannotated" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** The un-annotated tag, $short_refname, is not allowed in this repository" >&2
echo "*** Use 'git tag [ -a | -s ]' for tags you want to propagate." >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/tags/*,delete)
# delete tag
if [ "$allowdeletetag" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** Deleting a tag is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/tags/*,tag)
# annotated tag
if [ "$allowmodifytag" != "true" ] && git rev-parse $refname > /dev/null 2>&1
then
echo "*** Tag '$refname' already exists." >&2
echo "*** Modifying a tag is not allowed in this repository." >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/heads/*,commit)
# branch
if [ "$oldrev" = "$zero" -a "$denycreatebranch" = "true" ]; then
echo "*** Creating a branch is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/heads/*,delete)
# delete branch
if [ "$allowdeletebranch" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** Deleting a branch is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/remotes/*,commit)
# tracking branch
;;
refs/remotes/*,delete)
# delete tracking branch
if [ "$allowdeletebranch" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** Deleting a tracking branch is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
*)
# Anything else (is there anything else?)
echo "*** Update hook: unknown type of update to ref $refname of type $newrev_type" >&2
exit 1
;;
esac
# --- Finished
exit 0
# git ls-files --others --exclude-from=.git/info/exclude
# Lines that start with '#' are comments.
# For a project mostly in C, the following would be a good set of
# exclude patterns (uncomment them if you want to use them):
# *.[oa]
# *~
x]RK0Ybiv-ZԱlJX7y F5{[/Ӱ
2ix#!=}yxh+jt!9c0:=c5xFƃ[O8ိ}e3Yvas5jlnr6B<hm3+<^׉L'f@4 +8èM0"0COmp\lT>9ttFpهm75<vPv Aݳ׿析f׈\;{׉qd?Rb(Zlf*A=kZ(jg/֣9yVWj} y1^,voNv)RԖJBw"-W(Is'ϓدB! _gXymrEP% ^8ùSDKqȊ<`
ǛJ(6%Cas$5b ;Li*B7^}b'[ Y°d.3vBSqF:[P'A $) Gy\I<FR薗,*yYIH'Ap.g}#۠H דoOX]
\ No newline at end of file
x-A0DO1 M&쌗0.R1`77ת:%NܫAgZ?DI Dz-(ocxd~4RF!ŭ=,(Q-6V=,y 0_ޱk{BQ^7Ϻyq*Z)C
\ No newline at end of file
xuI@sWc41KC4Mc3^nze _'Q:~SX]n}RpLIHu,<sϴK%ډ4R2ɹNmQۓJh!6?L<OgDѡkrA~!ua\TZ7
K{R0l ^tړ>QL:
^d*b)i X `5FxY4pm}c1xBm_!Js8X1xjTC)`#vHux2-=d f9 ]<a <rY5Y<@OӰ?@{/ 9,WF*f9oѡ&4x;+^Lv ڜ6b' Fh}̖}<[z8OCWw*B_OZxXBXl@1~yiY\9Vص%LCs*nnD;fw5%
ct$k^6{ۮh; fI8uEqDgȦ.A+ÜX='@JM{7_U
\ No newline at end of file
x=Mk0 w҅®ccz,#؎$g)%U_~$M%ç?a:I
r&j7% d>h챲ȟL'Ȳn_k8&Q\`HQfNTiAV}9jiVDc@OvXitZRWK*1?F&zS.殱R4W!sY|
\ No newline at end of file
33233b4dd9081868f963d05d24854acf40ade0f6 tag 'v2.0.7' of https://github.com/pierrec/lz4
[core]
repositoryformatversion = 0
filemode = true
bare = true
ignorecase = true
precomposeunicode = true
[remote "origin"]
url = https://github.com/pierrec/lz4
fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/*
Unnamed repository; edit this file 'description' to name the repository.
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to check the commit log message taken by
# applypatch from an e-mail message.
#
# The hook should exit with non-zero status after issuing an
# appropriate message if it wants to stop the commit. The hook is
# allowed to edit the commit message file.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "applypatch-msg".
. git-sh-setup
commitmsg="$(git rev-parse --git-path hooks/commit-msg)"
test -x "$commitmsg" && exec "$commitmsg" ${1+"$@"}
:
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to check the commit log message.
# Called by "git commit" with one argument, the name of the file
# that has the commit message. The hook should exit with non-zero
# status after issuing an appropriate message if it wants to stop the
# commit. The hook is allowed to edit the commit message file.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "commit-msg".
# Uncomment the below to add a Signed-off-by line to the message.
# Doing this in a hook is a bad idea in general, but the prepare-commit-msg
# hook is more suited to it.
#
# SOB=$(git var GIT_AUTHOR_IDENT | sed -n 's/^\(.*>\).*$/Signed-off-by: \1/p')
# grep -qs "^$SOB" "$1" || echo "$SOB" >> "$1"
# This example catches duplicate Signed-off-by lines.
test "" = "$(grep '^Signed-off-by: ' "$1" |
sort | uniq -c | sed -e '/^[ ]*1[ ]/d')" || {
echo >&2 Duplicate Signed-off-by lines.
exit 1
}
#!/usr/bin/perl
use strict;
use warnings;
use IPC::Open2;
# An example hook script to integrate Watchman
# (https://facebook.github.io/watchman/) with git to speed up detecting
# new and modified files.
#
# The hook is passed a version (currently 1) and a time in nanoseconds
# formatted as a string and outputs to stdout all files that have been
# modified since the given time. Paths must be relative to the root of
# the working tree and separated by a single NUL.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "query-watchman" and set
# 'git config core.fsmonitor .git/hooks/query-watchman'
#
my ($version, $time) = @ARGV;
# Check the hook interface version
if ($version == 1) {
# convert nanoseconds to seconds
$time = int $time / 1000000000;
} else {
die "Unsupported query-fsmonitor hook version '$version'.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n";
}
my $git_work_tree;
if ($^O =~ 'msys' || $^O =~ 'cygwin') {
$git_work_tree = Win32::GetCwd();
$git_work_tree =~ tr/\\/\//;
} else {
require Cwd;
$git_work_tree = Cwd::cwd();
}
my $retry = 1;
launch_watchman();
sub launch_watchman {
my $pid = open2(\*CHLD_OUT, \*CHLD_IN, 'watchman -j --no-pretty')
or die "open2() failed: $!\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n";
# In the query expression below we're asking for names of files that
# changed since $time but were not transient (ie created after
# $time but no longer exist).
#
# To accomplish this, we're using the "since" generator to use the
# recency index to select candidate nodes and "fields" to limit the
# output to file names only. Then we're using the "expression" term to
# further constrain the results.
#
# The category of transient files that we want to ignore will have a
# creation clock (cclock) newer than $time_t value and will also not
# currently exist.
my $query = <<" END";
["query", "$git_work_tree", {
"since": $time,
"fields": ["name"],
"expression": ["not", ["allof", ["since", $time, "cclock"], ["not", "exists"]]]
}]
END
print CHLD_IN $query;
close CHLD_IN;
my $response = do {local $/; <CHLD_OUT>};
die "Watchman: command returned no output.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" if $response eq "";
die "Watchman: command returned invalid output: $response\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" unless $response =~ /^\{/;
my $json_pkg;
eval {
require JSON::XS;
$json_pkg = "JSON::XS";
1;
} or do {
require JSON::PP;
$json_pkg = "JSON::PP";
};
my $o = $json_pkg->new->utf8->decode($response);
if ($retry > 0 and $o->{error} and $o->{error} =~ m/unable to resolve root .* directory (.*) is not watched/) {
print STDERR "Adding '$git_work_tree' to watchman's watch list.\n";
$retry--;
qx/watchman watch "$git_work_tree"/;
die "Failed to make watchman watch '$git_work_tree'.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" if $? != 0;
# Watchman will always return all files on the first query so
# return the fast "everything is dirty" flag to git and do the
# Watchman query just to get it over with now so we won't pay
# the cost in git to look up each individual file.
print "/\0";
eval { launch_watchman() };
exit 0;
}
die "Watchman: $o->{error}.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" if $o->{error};
binmode STDOUT, ":utf8";
local $, = "\0";
print @{$o->{files}};
}
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to prepare a packed repository for use over
# dumb transports.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "post-update".
exec git update-server-info
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to verify what is about to be committed
# by applypatch from an e-mail message.
#
# The hook should exit with non-zero status after issuing an
# appropriate message if it wants to stop the commit.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "pre-applypatch".
. git-sh-setup
precommit="$(git rev-parse --git-path hooks/pre-commit)"
test -x "$precommit" && exec "$precommit" ${1+"$@"}
:
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to verify what is about to be committed.
# Called by "git commit" with no arguments. The hook should
# exit with non-zero status after issuing an appropriate message if
# it wants to stop the commit.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "pre-commit".
if git rev-parse --verify HEAD >/dev/null 2>&1
then
against=HEAD
else
# Initial commit: diff against an empty tree object
against=4b825dc642cb6eb9a060e54bf8d69288fbee4904
fi
# If you want to allow non-ASCII filenames set this variable to true.
allownonascii=$(git config --bool hooks.allownonascii)
# Redirect output to stderr.
exec 1>&2
# Cross platform projects tend to avoid non-ASCII filenames; prevent
# them from being added to the repository. We exploit the fact that the
# printable range starts at the space character and ends with tilde.
if [ "$allownonascii" != "true" ] &&
# Note that the use of brackets around a tr range is ok here, (it's
# even required, for portability to Solaris 10's /usr/bin/tr), since
# the square bracket bytes happen to fall in the designated range.
test $(git diff --cached --name-only --diff-filter=A -z $against |
LC_ALL=C tr -d '[ -~]\0' | wc -c) != 0
then
cat <<\EOF
Error: Attempt to add a non-ASCII file name.
This can cause problems if you want to work with people on other platforms.
To be portable it is advisable to rename the file.
If you know what you are doing you can disable this check using:
git config hooks.allownonascii true
EOF
exit 1
fi
# If there are whitespace errors, print the offending file names and fail.
exec git diff-index --check --cached $against --
#!/bin/sh
# An example hook script to verify what is about to be pushed. Called by "git
# push" after it has checked the remote status, but before anything has been
# pushed. If this script exits with a non-zero status nothing will be pushed.
#
# This hook is called with the following parameters:
#
# $1 -- Name of the remote to which the push is being done
# $2 -- URL to which the push is being done
#
# If pushing without using a named remote those arguments will be equal.
#
# Information about the commits which are being pushed is supplied as lines to
# the standard input in the form:
#
# <local ref> <local sha1> <remote ref> <remote sha1>
#
# This sample shows how to prevent push of commits where the log message starts
# with "WIP" (work in progress).
remote="$1"
url="$2"
z40=0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
while read local_ref local_sha remote_ref remote_sha
do
if [ "$local_sha" = $z40 ]
then
# Handle delete
:
else
if [ "$remote_sha" = $z40 ]
then
# New branch, examine all commits
range="$local_sha"
else
# Update to existing branch, examine new commits
range="$remote_sha..$local_sha"
fi
# Check for WIP commit
commit=`git rev-list -n 1 --grep '^WIP' "$range"`
if [ -n "$commit" ]
then
echo >&2 "Found WIP commit in $local_ref, not pushing"
exit 1
fi
fi
done
exit 0
#!/bin/sh
#
# Copyright (c) 2006, 2008 Junio C Hamano
#
# The "pre-rebase" hook is run just before "git rebase" starts doing
# its job, and can prevent the command from running by exiting with
# non-zero status.
#
# The hook is called with the following parameters:
#
# $1 -- the upstream the series was forked from.
# $2 -- the branch being rebased (or empty when rebasing the current branch).
#
# This sample shows how to prevent topic branches that are already
# merged to 'next' branch from getting rebased, because allowing it
# would result in rebasing already published history.
publish=next
basebranch="$1"
if test "$#" = 2
then
topic="refs/heads/$2"
else
topic=`git symbolic-ref HEAD` ||
exit 0 ;# we do not interrupt rebasing detached HEAD
fi
case "$topic" in
refs/heads/??/*)
;;
*)
exit 0 ;# we do not interrupt others.
;;
esac
# Now we are dealing with a topic branch being rebased
# on top of master. Is it OK to rebase it?
# Does the topic really exist?
git show-ref -q "$topic" || {
echo >&2 "No such branch $topic"
exit 1
}
# Is topic fully merged to master?
not_in_master=`git rev-list --pretty=oneline ^master "$topic"`
if test -z "$not_in_master"
then
echo >&2 "$topic is fully merged to master; better remove it."
exit 1 ;# we could allow it, but there is no point.
fi
# Is topic ever merged to next? If so you should not be rebasing it.
only_next_1=`git rev-list ^master "^$topic" ${publish} | sort`
only_next_2=`git rev-list ^master ${publish} | sort`
if test "$only_next_1" = "$only_next_2"
then
not_in_topic=`git rev-list "^$topic" master`
if test -z "$not_in_topic"
then
echo >&2 "$topic is already up to date with master"
exit 1 ;# we could allow it, but there is no point.
else
exit 0
fi
else
not_in_next=`git rev-list --pretty=oneline ^${publish} "$topic"`
/usr/bin/perl -e '
my $topic = $ARGV[0];
my $msg = "* $topic has commits already merged to public branch:\n";
my (%not_in_next) = map {
/^([0-9a-f]+) /;
($1 => 1);
} split(/\n/, $ARGV[1]);
for my $elem (map {
/^([0-9a-f]+) (.*)$/;
[$1 => $2];
} split(/\n/, $ARGV[2])) {
if (!exists $not_in_next{$elem->[0]}) {
if ($msg) {
print STDERR $msg;
undef $msg;
}
print STDERR " $elem->[1]\n";
}
}
' "$topic" "$not_in_next" "$not_in_master"
exit 1
fi
<<\DOC_END
This sample hook safeguards topic branches that have been
published from being rewound.
The workflow assumed here is:
* Once a topic branch forks from "master", "master" is never
merged into it again (either directly or indirectly).
* Once a topic branch is fully cooked and merged into "master",
it is deleted. If you need to build on top of it to correct
earlier mistakes, a new topic branch is created by forking at
the tip of the "master". This is not strictly necessary, but
it makes it easier to keep your history simple.
* Whenever you need to test or publish your changes to topic
branches, merge them into "next" branch.
The script, being an example, hardcodes the publish branch name
to be "next", but it is trivial to make it configurable via
$GIT_DIR/config mechanism.
With this workflow, you would want to know:
(1) ... if a topic branch has ever been merged to "next". Young
topic branches can have stupid mistakes you would rather
clean up before publishing, and things that have not been
merged into other branches can be easily rebased without
affecting other people. But once it is published, you would
not want to rewind it.
(2) ... if a topic branch has been fully merged to "master".
Then you can delete it. More importantly, you should not
build on top of it -- other people may already want to
change things related to the topic as patches against your
"master", so if you need further changes, it is better to
fork the topic (perhaps with the same name) afresh from the
tip of "master".
Let's look at this example:
o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o "next"
/ / / /
/ a---a---b A / /
/ / / /
/ / c---c---c---c B /
/ / / \ /
/ / / b---b C \ /
/ / / / \ /
---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o "master"
A, B and C are topic branches.
* A has one fix since it was merged up to "next".
* B has finished. It has been fully merged up to "master" and "next",
and is ready to be deleted.
* C has not merged to "next" at all.
We would want to allow C to be rebased, refuse A, and encourage
B to be deleted.
To compute (1):
git rev-list ^master ^topic next
git rev-list ^master next
if these match, topic has not merged in next at all.
To compute (2):
git rev-list master..topic
if this is empty, it is fully merged to "master".
DOC_END
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to make use of push options.
# The example simply echoes all push options that start with 'echoback='
# and rejects all pushes when the "reject" push option is used.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "pre-receive".
if test -n "$GIT_PUSH_OPTION_COUNT"
then
i=0
while test "$i" -lt "$GIT_PUSH_OPTION_COUNT"
do
eval "value=\$GIT_PUSH_OPTION_$i"
case "$value" in
echoback=*)
echo "echo from the pre-receive-hook: ${value#*=}" >&2
;;
reject)
exit 1
esac
i=$((i + 1))
done
fi
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to prepare the commit log message.
# Called by "git commit" with the name of the file that has the
# commit message, followed by the description of the commit
# message's source. The hook's purpose is to edit the commit
# message file. If the hook fails with a non-zero status,
# the commit is aborted.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "prepare-commit-msg".
# This hook includes three examples. The first one removes the
# "# Please enter the commit message..." help message.
#
# The second includes the output of "git diff --name-status -r"
# into the message, just before the "git status" output. It is
# commented because it doesn't cope with --amend or with squashed
# commits.
#
# The third example adds a Signed-off-by line to the message, that can
# still be edited. This is rarely a good idea.
COMMIT_MSG_FILE=$1
COMMIT_SOURCE=$2
SHA1=$3
/usr/bin/perl -i.bak -ne 'print unless(m/^. Please enter the commit message/..m/^#$/)' "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE"
# case "$COMMIT_SOURCE,$SHA1" in
# ,|template,)
# /usr/bin/perl -i.bak -pe '
# print "\n" . `git diff --cached --name-status -r`
# if /^#/ && $first++ == 0' "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE" ;;
# *) ;;
# esac
# SOB=$(git var GIT_COMMITTER_IDENT | sed -n 's/^\(.*>\).*$/Signed-off-by: \1/p')
# git interpret-trailers --in-place --trailer "$SOB" "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE"
# if test -z "$COMMIT_SOURCE"
# then
# /usr/bin/perl -i.bak -pe 'print "\n" if !$first_line++' "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE"
# fi
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to block unannotated tags from entering.
# Called by "git receive-pack" with arguments: refname sha1-old sha1-new
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "update".
#
# Config
# ------
# hooks.allowunannotated
# This boolean sets whether unannotated tags will be allowed into the
# repository. By default they won't be.
# hooks.allowdeletetag
# This boolean sets whether deleting tags will be allowed in the
# repository. By default they won't be.
# hooks.allowmodifytag
# This boolean sets whether a tag may be modified after creation. By default
# it won't be.
# hooks.allowdeletebranch
# This boolean sets whether deleting branches will be allowed in the
# repository. By default they won't be.
# hooks.denycreatebranch
# This boolean sets whether remotely creating branches will be denied
# in the repository. By default this is allowed.
#
# --- Command line
refname="$1"
oldrev="$2"
newrev="$3"
# --- Safety check
if [ -z "$GIT_DIR" ]; then
echo "Don't run this script from the command line." >&2
echo " (if you want, you could supply GIT_DIR then run" >&2
echo " $0 <ref> <oldrev> <newrev>)" >&2
exit 1
fi
if [ -z "$refname" -o -z "$oldrev" -o -z "$newrev" ]; then
echo "usage: $0 <ref> <oldrev> <newrev>" >&2
exit 1
fi
# --- Config
allowunannotated=$(git config --bool hooks.allowunannotated)
allowdeletebranch=$(git config --bool hooks.allowdeletebranch)
denycreatebranch=$(git config --bool hooks.denycreatebranch)
allowdeletetag=$(git config --bool hooks.allowdeletetag)
allowmodifytag=$(git config --bool hooks.allowmodifytag)
# check for no description
projectdesc=$(sed -e '1q' "$GIT_DIR/description")
case "$projectdesc" in
"Unnamed repository"* | "")
echo "*** Project description file hasn't been set" >&2
exit 1
;;
esac
# --- Check types
# if $newrev is 0000...0000, it's a commit to delete a ref.
zero="0000000000000000000000000000000000000000"
if [ "$newrev" = "$zero" ]; then
newrev_type=delete
else
newrev_type=$(git cat-file -t $newrev)
fi
case "$refname","$newrev_type" in
refs/tags/*,commit)
# un-annotated tag
short_refname=${refname##refs/tags/}
if [ "$allowunannotated" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** The un-annotated tag, $short_refname, is not allowed in this repository" >&2
echo "*** Use 'git tag [ -a | -s ]' for tags you want to propagate." >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/tags/*,delete)
# delete tag
if [ "$allowdeletetag" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** Deleting a tag is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/tags/*,tag)
# annotated tag
if [ "$allowmodifytag" != "true" ] && git rev-parse $refname > /dev/null 2>&1
then
echo "*** Tag '$refname' already exists." >&2
echo "*** Modifying a tag is not allowed in this repository." >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/heads/*,commit)
# branch
if [ "$oldrev" = "$zero" -a "$denycreatebranch" = "true" ]; then
echo "*** Creating a branch is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/heads/*,delete)
# delete branch
if [ "$allowdeletebranch" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** Deleting a branch is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/remotes/*,commit)
# tracking branch
;;
refs/remotes/*,delete)
# delete tracking branch
if [ "$allowdeletebranch" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** Deleting a tracking branch is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
*)
# Anything else (is there anything else?)
echo "*** Update hook: unknown type of update to ref $refname of type $newrev_type" >&2
exit 1
;;
esac
# --- Finished
exit 0
# git ls-files --others --exclude-from=.git/info/exclude
# Lines that start with '#' are comments.
# For a project mostly in C, the following would be a good set of
# exclude patterns (uncomment them if you want to use them):
# *.[oa]
# *~
git2:https://github.com/eapache/go-resiliency
\ No newline at end of file
ea41b0fad31007accc7f806884dcdf3da98b79ce tag 'v1.1.0' of https://github.com/eapache/go-resiliency
[core]
repositoryformatversion = 0
filemode = true
bare = true
ignorecase = true
precomposeunicode = true
[remote "origin"]
url = https://github.com/eapache/go-resiliency
fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/*
Unnamed repository; edit this file 'description' to name the repository.
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to check the commit log message taken by
# applypatch from an e-mail message.
#
# The hook should exit with non-zero status after issuing an
# appropriate message if it wants to stop the commit. The hook is
# allowed to edit the commit message file.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "applypatch-msg".
. git-sh-setup
commitmsg="$(git rev-parse --git-path hooks/commit-msg)"
test -x "$commitmsg" && exec "$commitmsg" ${1+"$@"}
:
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to check the commit log message.
# Called by "git commit" with one argument, the name of the file
# that has the commit message. The hook should exit with non-zero
# status after issuing an appropriate message if it wants to stop the
# commit. The hook is allowed to edit the commit message file.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "commit-msg".
# Uncomment the below to add a Signed-off-by line to the message.
# Doing this in a hook is a bad idea in general, but the prepare-commit-msg
# hook is more suited to it.
#
# SOB=$(git var GIT_AUTHOR_IDENT | sed -n 's/^\(.*>\).*$/Signed-off-by: \1/p')
# grep -qs "^$SOB" "$1" || echo "$SOB" >> "$1"
# This example catches duplicate Signed-off-by lines.
test "" = "$(grep '^Signed-off-by: ' "$1" |
sort | uniq -c | sed -e '/^[ ]*1[ ]/d')" || {
echo >&2 Duplicate Signed-off-by lines.
exit 1
}
#!/usr/bin/perl
use strict;
use warnings;
use IPC::Open2;
# An example hook script to integrate Watchman
# (https://facebook.github.io/watchman/) with git to speed up detecting
# new and modified files.
#
# The hook is passed a version (currently 1) and a time in nanoseconds
# formatted as a string and outputs to stdout all files that have been
# modified since the given time. Paths must be relative to the root of
# the working tree and separated by a single NUL.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "query-watchman" and set
# 'git config core.fsmonitor .git/hooks/query-watchman'
#
my ($version, $time) = @ARGV;
# Check the hook interface version
if ($version == 1) {
# convert nanoseconds to seconds
$time = int $time / 1000000000;
} else {
die "Unsupported query-fsmonitor hook version '$version'.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n";
}
my $git_work_tree;
if ($^O =~ 'msys' || $^O =~ 'cygwin') {
$git_work_tree = Win32::GetCwd();
$git_work_tree =~ tr/\\/\//;
} else {
require Cwd;
$git_work_tree = Cwd::cwd();
}
my $retry = 1;
launch_watchman();
sub launch_watchman {
my $pid = open2(\*CHLD_OUT, \*CHLD_IN, 'watchman -j --no-pretty')
or die "open2() failed: $!\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n";
# In the query expression below we're asking for names of files that
# changed since $time but were not transient (ie created after
# $time but no longer exist).
#
# To accomplish this, we're using the "since" generator to use the
# recency index to select candidate nodes and "fields" to limit the
# output to file names only. Then we're using the "expression" term to
# further constrain the results.
#
# The category of transient files that we want to ignore will have a
# creation clock (cclock) newer than $time_t value and will also not
# currently exist.
my $query = <<" END";
["query", "$git_work_tree", {
"since": $time,
"fields": ["name"],
"expression": ["not", ["allof", ["since", $time, "cclock"], ["not", "exists"]]]
}]
END
print CHLD_IN $query;
close CHLD_IN;
my $response = do {local $/; <CHLD_OUT>};
die "Watchman: command returned no output.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" if $response eq "";
die "Watchman: command returned invalid output: $response\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" unless $response =~ /^\{/;
my $json_pkg;
eval {
require JSON::XS;
$json_pkg = "JSON::XS";
1;
} or do {
require JSON::PP;
$json_pkg = "JSON::PP";
};
my $o = $json_pkg->new->utf8->decode($response);
if ($retry > 0 and $o->{error} and $o->{error} =~ m/unable to resolve root .* directory (.*) is not watched/) {
print STDERR "Adding '$git_work_tree' to watchman's watch list.\n";
$retry--;
qx/watchman watch "$git_work_tree"/;
die "Failed to make watchman watch '$git_work_tree'.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" if $? != 0;
# Watchman will always return all files on the first query so
# return the fast "everything is dirty" flag to git and do the
# Watchman query just to get it over with now so we won't pay
# the cost in git to look up each individual file.
print "/\0";
eval { launch_watchman() };
exit 0;
}
die "Watchman: $o->{error}.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" if $o->{error};
binmode STDOUT, ":utf8";
local $, = "\0";
print @{$o->{files}};
}
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to prepare a packed repository for use over
# dumb transports.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "post-update".
exec git update-server-info
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to verify what is about to be committed
# by applypatch from an e-mail message.
#
# The hook should exit with non-zero status after issuing an
# appropriate message if it wants to stop the commit.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "pre-applypatch".
. git-sh-setup
precommit="$(git rev-parse --git-path hooks/pre-commit)"
test -x "$precommit" && exec "$precommit" ${1+"$@"}
:
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to verify what is about to be committed.
# Called by "git commit" with no arguments. The hook should
# exit with non-zero status after issuing an appropriate message if
# it wants to stop the commit.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "pre-commit".
if git rev-parse --verify HEAD >/dev/null 2>&1
then
against=HEAD
else
# Initial commit: diff against an empty tree object
against=4b825dc642cb6eb9a060e54bf8d69288fbee4904
fi
# If you want to allow non-ASCII filenames set this variable to true.
allownonascii=$(git config --bool hooks.allownonascii)
# Redirect output to stderr.
exec 1>&2
# Cross platform projects tend to avoid non-ASCII filenames; prevent
# them from being added to the repository. We exploit the fact that the
# printable range starts at the space character and ends with tilde.
if [ "$allownonascii" != "true" ] &&
# Note that the use of brackets around a tr range is ok here, (it's
# even required, for portability to Solaris 10's /usr/bin/tr), since
# the square bracket bytes happen to fall in the designated range.
test $(git diff --cached --name-only --diff-filter=A -z $against |
LC_ALL=C tr -d '[ -~]\0' | wc -c) != 0
then
cat <<\EOF
Error: Attempt to add a non-ASCII file name.
This can cause problems if you want to work with people on other platforms.
To be portable it is advisable to rename the file.
If you know what you are doing you can disable this check using:
git config hooks.allownonascii true
EOF
exit 1
fi
# If there are whitespace errors, print the offending file names and fail.
exec git diff-index --check --cached $against --
#!/bin/sh
# An example hook script to verify what is about to be pushed. Called by "git
# push" after it has checked the remote status, but before anything has been
# pushed. If this script exits with a non-zero status nothing will be pushed.
#
# This hook is called with the following parameters:
#
# $1 -- Name of the remote to which the push is being done
# $2 -- URL to which the push is being done
#
# If pushing without using a named remote those arguments will be equal.
#
# Information about the commits which are being pushed is supplied as lines to
# the standard input in the form:
#
# <local ref> <local sha1> <remote ref> <remote sha1>
#
# This sample shows how to prevent push of commits where the log message starts
# with "WIP" (work in progress).
remote="$1"
url="$2"
z40=0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
while read local_ref local_sha remote_ref remote_sha
do
if [ "$local_sha" = $z40 ]
then
# Handle delete
:
else
if [ "$remote_sha" = $z40 ]
then
# New branch, examine all commits
range="$local_sha"
else
# Update to existing branch, examine new commits
range="$remote_sha..$local_sha"
fi
# Check for WIP commit
commit=`git rev-list -n 1 --grep '^WIP' "$range"`
if [ -n "$commit" ]
then
echo >&2 "Found WIP commit in $local_ref, not pushing"
exit 1
fi
fi
done
exit 0
#!/bin/sh
#
# Copyright (c) 2006, 2008 Junio C Hamano
#
# The "pre-rebase" hook is run just before "git rebase" starts doing
# its job, and can prevent the command from running by exiting with
# non-zero status.
#
# The hook is called with the following parameters:
#
# $1 -- the upstream the series was forked from.
# $2 -- the branch being rebased (or empty when rebasing the current branch).
#
# This sample shows how to prevent topic branches that are already
# merged to 'next' branch from getting rebased, because allowing it
# would result in rebasing already published history.
publish=next
basebranch="$1"
if test "$#" = 2
then
topic="refs/heads/$2"
else
topic=`git symbolic-ref HEAD` ||
exit 0 ;# we do not interrupt rebasing detached HEAD
fi
case "$topic" in
refs/heads/??/*)
;;
*)
exit 0 ;# we do not interrupt others.
;;
esac
# Now we are dealing with a topic branch being rebased
# on top of master. Is it OK to rebase it?
# Does the topic really exist?
git show-ref -q "$topic" || {
echo >&2 "No such branch $topic"
exit 1
}
# Is topic fully merged to master?
not_in_master=`git rev-list --pretty=oneline ^master "$topic"`
if test -z "$not_in_master"
then
echo >&2 "$topic is fully merged to master; better remove it."
exit 1 ;# we could allow it, but there is no point.
fi
# Is topic ever merged to next? If so you should not be rebasing it.
only_next_1=`git rev-list ^master "^$topic" ${publish} | sort`
only_next_2=`git rev-list ^master ${publish} | sort`
if test "$only_next_1" = "$only_next_2"
then
not_in_topic=`git rev-list "^$topic" master`
if test -z "$not_in_topic"
then
echo >&2 "$topic is already up to date with master"
exit 1 ;# we could allow it, but there is no point.
else
exit 0
fi
else
not_in_next=`git rev-list --pretty=oneline ^${publish} "$topic"`
/usr/bin/perl -e '
my $topic = $ARGV[0];
my $msg = "* $topic has commits already merged to public branch:\n";
my (%not_in_next) = map {
/^([0-9a-f]+) /;
($1 => 1);
} split(/\n/, $ARGV[1]);
for my $elem (map {
/^([0-9a-f]+) (.*)$/;
[$1 => $2];
} split(/\n/, $ARGV[2])) {
if (!exists $not_in_next{$elem->[0]}) {
if ($msg) {
print STDERR $msg;
undef $msg;
}
print STDERR " $elem->[1]\n";
}
}
' "$topic" "$not_in_next" "$not_in_master"
exit 1
fi
<<\DOC_END
This sample hook safeguards topic branches that have been
published from being rewound.
The workflow assumed here is:
* Once a topic branch forks from "master", "master" is never
merged into it again (either directly or indirectly).
* Once a topic branch is fully cooked and merged into "master",
it is deleted. If you need to build on top of it to correct
earlier mistakes, a new topic branch is created by forking at
the tip of the "master". This is not strictly necessary, but
it makes it easier to keep your history simple.
* Whenever you need to test or publish your changes to topic
branches, merge them into "next" branch.
The script, being an example, hardcodes the publish branch name
to be "next", but it is trivial to make it configurable via
$GIT_DIR/config mechanism.
With this workflow, you would want to know:
(1) ... if a topic branch has ever been merged to "next". Young
topic branches can have stupid mistakes you would rather
clean up before publishing, and things that have not been
merged into other branches can be easily rebased without
affecting other people. But once it is published, you would
not want to rewind it.
(2) ... if a topic branch has been fully merged to "master".
Then you can delete it. More importantly, you should not
build on top of it -- other people may already want to
change things related to the topic as patches against your
"master", so if you need further changes, it is better to
fork the topic (perhaps with the same name) afresh from the
tip of "master".
Let's look at this example:
o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o "next"
/ / / /
/ a---a---b A / /
/ / / /
/ / c---c---c---c B /
/ / / \ /
/ / / b---b C \ /
/ / / / \ /
---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o "master"
A, B and C are topic branches.
* A has one fix since it was merged up to "next".
* B has finished. It has been fully merged up to "master" and "next",
and is ready to be deleted.
* C has not merged to "next" at all.
We would want to allow C to be rebased, refuse A, and encourage
B to be deleted.
To compute (1):
git rev-list ^master ^topic next
git rev-list ^master next
if these match, topic has not merged in next at all.
To compute (2):
git rev-list master..topic
if this is empty, it is fully merged to "master".
DOC_END
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to make use of push options.
# The example simply echoes all push options that start with 'echoback='
# and rejects all pushes when the "reject" push option is used.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "pre-receive".
if test -n "$GIT_PUSH_OPTION_COUNT"
then
i=0
while test "$i" -lt "$GIT_PUSH_OPTION_COUNT"
do
eval "value=\$GIT_PUSH_OPTION_$i"
case "$value" in
echoback=*)
echo "echo from the pre-receive-hook: ${value#*=}" >&2
;;
reject)
exit 1
esac
i=$((i + 1))
done
fi
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to prepare the commit log message.
# Called by "git commit" with the name of the file that has the
# commit message, followed by the description of the commit
# message's source. The hook's purpose is to edit the commit
# message file. If the hook fails with a non-zero status,
# the commit is aborted.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "prepare-commit-msg".
# This hook includes three examples. The first one removes the
# "# Please enter the commit message..." help message.
#
# The second includes the output of "git diff --name-status -r"
# into the message, just before the "git status" output. It is
# commented because it doesn't cope with --amend or with squashed
# commits.
#
# The third example adds a Signed-off-by line to the message, that can
# still be edited. This is rarely a good idea.
COMMIT_MSG_FILE=$1
COMMIT_SOURCE=$2
SHA1=$3
/usr/bin/perl -i.bak -ne 'print unless(m/^. Please enter the commit message/..m/^#$/)' "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE"
# case "$COMMIT_SOURCE,$SHA1" in
# ,|template,)
# /usr/bin/perl -i.bak -pe '
# print "\n" . `git diff --cached --name-status -r`
# if /^#/ && $first++ == 0' "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE" ;;
# *) ;;
# esac
# SOB=$(git var GIT_COMMITTER_IDENT | sed -n 's/^\(.*>\).*$/Signed-off-by: \1/p')
# git interpret-trailers --in-place --trailer "$SOB" "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE"
# if test -z "$COMMIT_SOURCE"
# then
# /usr/bin/perl -i.bak -pe 'print "\n" if !$first_line++' "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE"
# fi
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to block unannotated tags from entering.
# Called by "git receive-pack" with arguments: refname sha1-old sha1-new
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "update".
#
# Config
# ------
# hooks.allowunannotated
# This boolean sets whether unannotated tags will be allowed into the
# repository. By default they won't be.
# hooks.allowdeletetag
# This boolean sets whether deleting tags will be allowed in the
# repository. By default they won't be.
# hooks.allowmodifytag
# This boolean sets whether a tag may be modified after creation. By default
# it won't be.
# hooks.allowdeletebranch
# This boolean sets whether deleting branches will be allowed in the
# repository. By default they won't be.
# hooks.denycreatebranch
# This boolean sets whether remotely creating branches will be denied
# in the repository. By default this is allowed.
#
# --- Command line
refname="$1"
oldrev="$2"
newrev="$3"
# --- Safety check
if [ -z "$GIT_DIR" ]; then
echo "Don't run this script from the command line." >&2
echo " (if you want, you could supply GIT_DIR then run" >&2
echo " $0 <ref> <oldrev> <newrev>)" >&2
exit 1
fi
if [ -z "$refname" -o -z "$oldrev" -o -z "$newrev" ]; then
echo "usage: $0 <ref> <oldrev> <newrev>" >&2
exit 1
fi
# --- Config
allowunannotated=$(git config --bool hooks.allowunannotated)
allowdeletebranch=$(git config --bool hooks.allowdeletebranch)
denycreatebranch=$(git config --bool hooks.denycreatebranch)
allowdeletetag=$(git config --bool hooks.allowdeletetag)
allowmodifytag=$(git config --bool hooks.allowmodifytag)
# check for no description
projectdesc=$(sed -e '1q' "$GIT_DIR/description")
case "$projectdesc" in
"Unnamed repository"* | "")
echo "*** Project description file hasn't been set" >&2
exit 1
;;
esac
# --- Check types
# if $newrev is 0000...0000, it's a commit to delete a ref.
zero="0000000000000000000000000000000000000000"
if [ "$newrev" = "$zero" ]; then
newrev_type=delete
else
newrev_type=$(git cat-file -t $newrev)
fi
case "$refname","$newrev_type" in
refs/tags/*,commit)
# un-annotated tag
short_refname=${refname##refs/tags/}
if [ "$allowunannotated" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** The un-annotated tag, $short_refname, is not allowed in this repository" >&2
echo "*** Use 'git tag [ -a | -s ]' for tags you want to propagate." >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/tags/*,delete)
# delete tag
if [ "$allowdeletetag" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** Deleting a tag is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/tags/*,tag)
# annotated tag
if [ "$allowmodifytag" != "true" ] && git rev-parse $refname > /dev/null 2>&1
then
echo "*** Tag '$refname' already exists." >&2
echo "*** Modifying a tag is not allowed in this repository." >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/heads/*,commit)
# branch
if [ "$oldrev" = "$zero" -a "$denycreatebranch" = "true" ]; then
echo "*** Creating a branch is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/heads/*,delete)
# delete branch
if [ "$allowdeletebranch" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** Deleting a branch is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/remotes/*,commit)
# tracking branch
;;
refs/remotes/*,delete)
# delete tracking branch
if [ "$allowdeletebranch" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** Deleting a tracking branch is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
*)
# Anything else (is there anything else?)
echo "*** Update hook: unknown type of update to ref $refname of type $newrev_type" >&2
exit 1
;;
esac
# --- Finished
exit 0
# git ls-files --others --exclude-from=.git/info/exclude
# Lines that start with '#' are comments.
# For a project mostly in C, the following would be a good set of
# exclude patterns (uncomment them if you want to use them):
# *.[oa]
# *~
xSM0YB{(a-'=.,K7K?.4P,aeWq8Rh}f޼7S-2BB(!67k<-sa* *kBJ;XGL{Lf9d&I2]WL㽉3O+ +
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\ No newline at end of file
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\ No newline at end of file
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\ No newline at end of file
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\ No newline at end of file
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\ No newline at end of file
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eE}[
\ No newline at end of file
git2:https://github.com/samuel/go-zookeeper
\ No newline at end of file
c4fab1ac1bec58281ad0667dc3f0907a9476ac47 'c4fab1ac1bec58281ad0667dc3f0907a9476ac47' of https://github.com/samuel/go-zookeeper
[core]
repositoryformatversion = 0
filemode = true
bare = true
ignorecase = true
precomposeunicode = true
[remote "origin"]
url = https://github.com/samuel/go-zookeeper
fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/*
Unnamed repository; edit this file 'description' to name the repository.
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to check the commit log message taken by
# applypatch from an e-mail message.
#
# The hook should exit with non-zero status after issuing an
# appropriate message if it wants to stop the commit. The hook is
# allowed to edit the commit message file.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "applypatch-msg".
. git-sh-setup
commitmsg="$(git rev-parse --git-path hooks/commit-msg)"
test -x "$commitmsg" && exec "$commitmsg" ${1+"$@"}
:
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to check the commit log message.
# Called by "git commit" with one argument, the name of the file
# that has the commit message. The hook should exit with non-zero
# status after issuing an appropriate message if it wants to stop the
# commit. The hook is allowed to edit the commit message file.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "commit-msg".
# Uncomment the below to add a Signed-off-by line to the message.
# Doing this in a hook is a bad idea in general, but the prepare-commit-msg
# hook is more suited to it.
#
# SOB=$(git var GIT_AUTHOR_IDENT | sed -n 's/^\(.*>\).*$/Signed-off-by: \1/p')
# grep -qs "^$SOB" "$1" || echo "$SOB" >> "$1"
# This example catches duplicate Signed-off-by lines.
test "" = "$(grep '^Signed-off-by: ' "$1" |
sort | uniq -c | sed -e '/^[ ]*1[ ]/d')" || {
echo >&2 Duplicate Signed-off-by lines.
exit 1
}
#!/usr/bin/perl
use strict;
use warnings;
use IPC::Open2;
# An example hook script to integrate Watchman
# (https://facebook.github.io/watchman/) with git to speed up detecting
# new and modified files.
#
# The hook is passed a version (currently 1) and a time in nanoseconds
# formatted as a string and outputs to stdout all files that have been
# modified since the given time. Paths must be relative to the root of
# the working tree and separated by a single NUL.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "query-watchman" and set
# 'git config core.fsmonitor .git/hooks/query-watchman'
#
my ($version, $time) = @ARGV;
# Check the hook interface version
if ($version == 1) {
# convert nanoseconds to seconds
$time = int $time / 1000000000;
} else {
die "Unsupported query-fsmonitor hook version '$version'.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n";
}
my $git_work_tree;
if ($^O =~ 'msys' || $^O =~ 'cygwin') {
$git_work_tree = Win32::GetCwd();
$git_work_tree =~ tr/\\/\//;
} else {
require Cwd;
$git_work_tree = Cwd::cwd();
}
my $retry = 1;
launch_watchman();
sub launch_watchman {
my $pid = open2(\*CHLD_OUT, \*CHLD_IN, 'watchman -j --no-pretty')
or die "open2() failed: $!\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n";
# In the query expression below we're asking for names of files that
# changed since $time but were not transient (ie created after
# $time but no longer exist).
#
# To accomplish this, we're using the "since" generator to use the
# recency index to select candidate nodes and "fields" to limit the
# output to file names only. Then we're using the "expression" term to
# further constrain the results.
#
# The category of transient files that we want to ignore will have a
# creation clock (cclock) newer than $time_t value and will also not
# currently exist.
my $query = <<" END";
["query", "$git_work_tree", {
"since": $time,
"fields": ["name"],
"expression": ["not", ["allof", ["since", $time, "cclock"], ["not", "exists"]]]
}]
END
print CHLD_IN $query;
close CHLD_IN;
my $response = do {local $/; <CHLD_OUT>};
die "Watchman: command returned no output.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" if $response eq "";
die "Watchman: command returned invalid output: $response\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" unless $response =~ /^\{/;
my $json_pkg;
eval {
require JSON::XS;
$json_pkg = "JSON::XS";
1;
} or do {
require JSON::PP;
$json_pkg = "JSON::PP";
};
my $o = $json_pkg->new->utf8->decode($response);
if ($retry > 0 and $o->{error} and $o->{error} =~ m/unable to resolve root .* directory (.*) is not watched/) {
print STDERR "Adding '$git_work_tree' to watchman's watch list.\n";
$retry--;
qx/watchman watch "$git_work_tree"/;
die "Failed to make watchman watch '$git_work_tree'.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" if $? != 0;
# Watchman will always return all files on the first query so
# return the fast "everything is dirty" flag to git and do the
# Watchman query just to get it over with now so we won't pay
# the cost in git to look up each individual file.
print "/\0";
eval { launch_watchman() };
exit 0;
}
die "Watchman: $o->{error}.\n" .
"Falling back to scanning...\n" if $o->{error};
binmode STDOUT, ":utf8";
local $, = "\0";
print @{$o->{files}};
}
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to prepare a packed repository for use over
# dumb transports.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "post-update".
exec git update-server-info
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to verify what is about to be committed
# by applypatch from an e-mail message.
#
# The hook should exit with non-zero status after issuing an
# appropriate message if it wants to stop the commit.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "pre-applypatch".
. git-sh-setup
precommit="$(git rev-parse --git-path hooks/pre-commit)"
test -x "$precommit" && exec "$precommit" ${1+"$@"}
:
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to verify what is about to be committed.
# Called by "git commit" with no arguments. The hook should
# exit with non-zero status after issuing an appropriate message if
# it wants to stop the commit.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "pre-commit".
if git rev-parse --verify HEAD >/dev/null 2>&1
then
against=HEAD
else
# Initial commit: diff against an empty tree object
against=4b825dc642cb6eb9a060e54bf8d69288fbee4904
fi
# If you want to allow non-ASCII filenames set this variable to true.
allownonascii=$(git config --bool hooks.allownonascii)
# Redirect output to stderr.
exec 1>&2
# Cross platform projects tend to avoid non-ASCII filenames; prevent
# them from being added to the repository. We exploit the fact that the
# printable range starts at the space character and ends with tilde.
if [ "$allownonascii" != "true" ] &&
# Note that the use of brackets around a tr range is ok here, (it's
# even required, for portability to Solaris 10's /usr/bin/tr), since
# the square bracket bytes happen to fall in the designated range.
test $(git diff --cached --name-only --diff-filter=A -z $against |
LC_ALL=C tr -d '[ -~]\0' | wc -c) != 0
then
cat <<\EOF
Error: Attempt to add a non-ASCII file name.
This can cause problems if you want to work with people on other platforms.
To be portable it is advisable to rename the file.
If you know what you are doing you can disable this check using:
git config hooks.allownonascii true
EOF
exit 1
fi
# If there are whitespace errors, print the offending file names and fail.
exec git diff-index --check --cached $against --
#!/bin/sh
# An example hook script to verify what is about to be pushed. Called by "git
# push" after it has checked the remote status, but before anything has been
# pushed. If this script exits with a non-zero status nothing will be pushed.
#
# This hook is called with the following parameters:
#
# $1 -- Name of the remote to which the push is being done
# $2 -- URL to which the push is being done
#
# If pushing without using a named remote those arguments will be equal.
#
# Information about the commits which are being pushed is supplied as lines to
# the standard input in the form:
#
# <local ref> <local sha1> <remote ref> <remote sha1>
#
# This sample shows how to prevent push of commits where the log message starts
# with "WIP" (work in progress).
remote="$1"
url="$2"
z40=0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
while read local_ref local_sha remote_ref remote_sha
do
if [ "$local_sha" = $z40 ]
then
# Handle delete
:
else
if [ "$remote_sha" = $z40 ]
then
# New branch, examine all commits
range="$local_sha"
else
# Update to existing branch, examine new commits
range="$remote_sha..$local_sha"
fi
# Check for WIP commit
commit=`git rev-list -n 1 --grep '^WIP' "$range"`
if [ -n "$commit" ]
then
echo >&2 "Found WIP commit in $local_ref, not pushing"
exit 1
fi
fi
done
exit 0
#!/bin/sh
#
# Copyright (c) 2006, 2008 Junio C Hamano
#
# The "pre-rebase" hook is run just before "git rebase" starts doing
# its job, and can prevent the command from running by exiting with
# non-zero status.
#
# The hook is called with the following parameters:
#
# $1 -- the upstream the series was forked from.
# $2 -- the branch being rebased (or empty when rebasing the current branch).
#
# This sample shows how to prevent topic branches that are already
# merged to 'next' branch from getting rebased, because allowing it
# would result in rebasing already published history.
publish=next
basebranch="$1"
if test "$#" = 2
then
topic="refs/heads/$2"
else
topic=`git symbolic-ref HEAD` ||
exit 0 ;# we do not interrupt rebasing detached HEAD
fi
case "$topic" in
refs/heads/??/*)
;;
*)
exit 0 ;# we do not interrupt others.
;;
esac
# Now we are dealing with a topic branch being rebased
# on top of master. Is it OK to rebase it?
# Does the topic really exist?
git show-ref -q "$topic" || {
echo >&2 "No such branch $topic"
exit 1
}
# Is topic fully merged to master?
not_in_master=`git rev-list --pretty=oneline ^master "$topic"`
if test -z "$not_in_master"
then
echo >&2 "$topic is fully merged to master; better remove it."
exit 1 ;# we could allow it, but there is no point.
fi
# Is topic ever merged to next? If so you should not be rebasing it.
only_next_1=`git rev-list ^master "^$topic" ${publish} | sort`
only_next_2=`git rev-list ^master ${publish} | sort`
if test "$only_next_1" = "$only_next_2"
then
not_in_topic=`git rev-list "^$topic" master`
if test -z "$not_in_topic"
then
echo >&2 "$topic is already up to date with master"
exit 1 ;# we could allow it, but there is no point.
else
exit 0
fi
else
not_in_next=`git rev-list --pretty=oneline ^${publish} "$topic"`
/usr/bin/perl -e '
my $topic = $ARGV[0];
my $msg = "* $topic has commits already merged to public branch:\n";
my (%not_in_next) = map {
/^([0-9a-f]+) /;
($1 => 1);
} split(/\n/, $ARGV[1]);
for my $elem (map {
/^([0-9a-f]+) (.*)$/;
[$1 => $2];
} split(/\n/, $ARGV[2])) {
if (!exists $not_in_next{$elem->[0]}) {
if ($msg) {
print STDERR $msg;
undef $msg;
}
print STDERR " $elem->[1]\n";
}
}
' "$topic" "$not_in_next" "$not_in_master"
exit 1
fi
<<\DOC_END
This sample hook safeguards topic branches that have been
published from being rewound.
The workflow assumed here is:
* Once a topic branch forks from "master", "master" is never
merged into it again (either directly or indirectly).
* Once a topic branch is fully cooked and merged into "master",
it is deleted. If you need to build on top of it to correct
earlier mistakes, a new topic branch is created by forking at
the tip of the "master". This is not strictly necessary, but
it makes it easier to keep your history simple.
* Whenever you need to test or publish your changes to topic
branches, merge them into "next" branch.
The script, being an example, hardcodes the publish branch name
to be "next", but it is trivial to make it configurable via
$GIT_DIR/config mechanism.
With this workflow, you would want to know:
(1) ... if a topic branch has ever been merged to "next". Young
topic branches can have stupid mistakes you would rather
clean up before publishing, and things that have not been
merged into other branches can be easily rebased without
affecting other people. But once it is published, you would
not want to rewind it.
(2) ... if a topic branch has been fully merged to "master".
Then you can delete it. More importantly, you should not
build on top of it -- other people may already want to
change things related to the topic as patches against your
"master", so if you need further changes, it is better to
fork the topic (perhaps with the same name) afresh from the
tip of "master".
Let's look at this example:
o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o "next"
/ / / /
/ a---a---b A / /
/ / / /
/ / c---c---c---c B /
/ / / \ /
/ / / b---b C \ /
/ / / / \ /
---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o "master"
A, B and C are topic branches.
* A has one fix since it was merged up to "next".
* B has finished. It has been fully merged up to "master" and "next",
and is ready to be deleted.
* C has not merged to "next" at all.
We would want to allow C to be rebased, refuse A, and encourage
B to be deleted.
To compute (1):
git rev-list ^master ^topic next
git rev-list ^master next
if these match, topic has not merged in next at all.
To compute (2):
git rev-list master..topic
if this is empty, it is fully merged to "master".
DOC_END
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to make use of push options.
# The example simply echoes all push options that start with 'echoback='
# and rejects all pushes when the "reject" push option is used.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "pre-receive".
if test -n "$GIT_PUSH_OPTION_COUNT"
then
i=0
while test "$i" -lt "$GIT_PUSH_OPTION_COUNT"
do
eval "value=\$GIT_PUSH_OPTION_$i"
case "$value" in
echoback=*)
echo "echo from the pre-receive-hook: ${value#*=}" >&2
;;
reject)
exit 1
esac
i=$((i + 1))
done
fi
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to prepare the commit log message.
# Called by "git commit" with the name of the file that has the
# commit message, followed by the description of the commit
# message's source. The hook's purpose is to edit the commit
# message file. If the hook fails with a non-zero status,
# the commit is aborted.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "prepare-commit-msg".
# This hook includes three examples. The first one removes the
# "# Please enter the commit message..." help message.
#
# The second includes the output of "git diff --name-status -r"
# into the message, just before the "git status" output. It is
# commented because it doesn't cope with --amend or with squashed
# commits.
#
# The third example adds a Signed-off-by line to the message, that can
# still be edited. This is rarely a good idea.
COMMIT_MSG_FILE=$1
COMMIT_SOURCE=$2
SHA1=$3
/usr/bin/perl -i.bak -ne 'print unless(m/^. Please enter the commit message/..m/^#$/)' "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE"
# case "$COMMIT_SOURCE,$SHA1" in
# ,|template,)
# /usr/bin/perl -i.bak -pe '
# print "\n" . `git diff --cached --name-status -r`
# if /^#/ && $first++ == 0' "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE" ;;
# *) ;;
# esac
# SOB=$(git var GIT_COMMITTER_IDENT | sed -n 's/^\(.*>\).*$/Signed-off-by: \1/p')
# git interpret-trailers --in-place --trailer "$SOB" "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE"
# if test -z "$COMMIT_SOURCE"
# then
# /usr/bin/perl -i.bak -pe 'print "\n" if !$first_line++' "$COMMIT_MSG_FILE"
# fi
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to block unannotated tags from entering.
# Called by "git receive-pack" with arguments: refname sha1-old sha1-new
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "update".
#
# Config
# ------
# hooks.allowunannotated
# This boolean sets whether unannotated tags will be allowed into the
# repository. By default they won't be.
# hooks.allowdeletetag
# This boolean sets whether deleting tags will be allowed in the
# repository. By default they won't be.
# hooks.allowmodifytag
# This boolean sets whether a tag may be modified after creation. By default
# it won't be.
# hooks.allowdeletebranch
# This boolean sets whether deleting branches will be allowed in the
# repository. By default they won't be.
# hooks.denycreatebranch
# This boolean sets whether remotely creating branches will be denied
# in the repository. By default this is allowed.
#
# --- Command line
refname="$1"
oldrev="$2"
newrev="$3"
# --- Safety check
if [ -z "$GIT_DIR" ]; then
echo "Don't run this script from the command line." >&2
echo " (if you want, you could supply GIT_DIR then run" >&2
echo " $0 <ref> <oldrev> <newrev>)" >&2
exit 1
fi
if [ -z "$refname" -o -z "$oldrev" -o -z "$newrev" ]; then
echo "usage: $0 <ref> <oldrev> <newrev>" >&2
exit 1
fi
# --- Config
allowunannotated=$(git config --bool hooks.allowunannotated)
allowdeletebranch=$(git config --bool hooks.allowdeletebranch)
denycreatebranch=$(git config --bool hooks.denycreatebranch)
allowdeletetag=$(git config --bool hooks.allowdeletetag)
allowmodifytag=$(git config --bool hooks.allowmodifytag)
# check for no description
projectdesc=$(sed -e '1q' "$GIT_DIR/description")
case "$projectdesc" in
"Unnamed repository"* | "")
echo "*** Project description file hasn't been set" >&2
exit 1
;;
esac
# --- Check types
# if $newrev is 0000...0000, it's a commit to delete a ref.
zero="0000000000000000000000000000000000000000"
if [ "$newrev" = "$zero" ]; then
newrev_type=delete
else
newrev_type=$(git cat-file -t $newrev)
fi
case "$refname","$newrev_type" in
refs/tags/*,commit)
# un-annotated tag
short_refname=${refname##refs/tags/}
if [ "$allowunannotated" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** The un-annotated tag, $short_refname, is not allowed in this repository" >&2
echo "*** Use 'git tag [ -a | -s ]' for tags you want to propagate." >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/tags/*,delete)
# delete tag
if [ "$allowdeletetag" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** Deleting a tag is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/tags/*,tag)
# annotated tag
if [ "$allowmodifytag" != "true" ] && git rev-parse $refname > /dev/null 2>&1
then
echo "*** Tag '$refname' already exists." >&2
echo "*** Modifying a tag is not allowed in this repository." >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/heads/*,commit)
# branch
if [ "$oldrev" = "$zero" -a "$denycreatebranch" = "true" ]; then
echo "*** Creating a branch is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/heads/*,delete)
# delete branch
if [ "$allowdeletebranch" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** Deleting a branch is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
refs/remotes/*,commit)
# tracking branch
;;
refs/remotes/*,delete)
# delete tracking branch
if [ "$allowdeletebranch" != "true" ]; then
echo "*** Deleting a tracking branch is not allowed in this repository" >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
*)
# Anything else (is there anything else?)
echo "*** Update hook: unknown type of update to ref $refname of type $newrev_type" >&2
exit 1
;;
esac
# --- Finished
exit 0
# git ls-files --others --exclude-from=.git/info/exclude
# Lines that start with '#' are comments.
# For a project mostly in C, the following would be a good set of
# exclude patterns (uncomment them if you want to use them):
# *.[oa]
# *~
xJ0vb vVAӾi$%M=t黛 _»b h380&X6 6TquDy1w 2zjc Q9~HB1msb/blq/=f(uYdz\~&ZKiuds 9WR5eCs-)˜Կ*Dj!wS |:i
\ No newline at end of file
xR=o0*9I0p b{ :I&$yrZ=RI]En<{mZO?tJ7F84B]<YnĸLs@:=s1ꭆ5'{9yOGekIpSG"2*VdTA;[2΂r 0-\qX0pMe ۘ۩* |8YzЭ (RD2`5EJVj(GzoO>c. GShb 0WʲȎ2vhc@#)OQEۇ8v Ń Z}̣L?6y&ggXq.fQtŽ3yrտWYE搞*%>áZN]i[׈=fKe =U,Q8ZL楩mmY%N+E#
0n7}fa 8 L{~?MLA3 %y3kX+IW0cg+\\nr QhK
\ No newline at end of file
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