2013-11-14

A release candidate Git v1.8.5-rc2 is now available for testing

at the usual places.

We now have updated l10n strings, but other than that there is not

much change since v1.8.5-rc1; hopefully we can have an uneventful

final release mid next week.

The release tarballs are found at:

http://code.google.com/p/git-core/downloads/list

and their SHA-1 checksums are:

49c95269ad0925026f606adaba9db91ca60e050b git-1.8.5.rc2.tar.gz

3a41d756fffed7b82f00fdc27b473b159fe29dc0 git-htmldocs-1.8.5.rc2.tar.gz

20c5d04a59392c4a882696c443f086a59c45ba4c git-manpages-1.8.5.rc2.tar.gz

The following public repositories all have a copy of the v1.8.5-rc2

tag and the master branch that the tag points at:

url = https://kernel.googlesource.com/pub/scm/git/git

url = git://repo.or.cz/alt-git.git

url = https://code.google.com/p/git-core/

url = git://git.sourceforge.jp/gitroot/git-core/git.git

url = git://git-core.git.sourceforge.net/gitroot/git-core/git-core

url = https://github.com/gitster/git

Git v1.8.5 Release Notes (draft)

========================

Backward compatibility notes (for Git 2.0)

------------------------------------------

When "git push [$there]" does not say what to push, we have used the

traditional "matching" semantics so far (all your branches were sent

to the remote as long as there already are branches of the same name

over there). In Git 2.0, the default will change to the "simple"

semantics that pushes:

- only the current branch to the branch with the same name, and only

when the current branch is set to integrate with that remote

branch, if you are pushing to the same remote as you fetch from; or

- only the current branch to the branch with the same name, if you

are pushing to a remote that is not where you usually fetch from.

Use the user preference configuration variable "push.default" to

change this. If you are an old-timer who is used to the "matching"

semantics, you can set the variable to "matching" to keep the

traditional behaviour. If you want to live in the future early, you

can set it to "simple" today without waiting for Git 2.0.

When "git add -u" (and "git add -A") is run inside a subdirectory and

does not specify which paths to add on the command line, it

will operate on the entire tree in Git 2.0 for consistency

with "git commit -a" and other commands. There will be no

mechanism to make plain "git add -u" behave like "git add -u .".

Current users of "git add -u" (without a pathspec) should start

training their fingers to explicitly say "git add -u ."

before Git 2.0 comes. A warning is issued when these commands are

run without a pathspec and when you have local changes outside the

current directory, because the behaviour in Git 2.0 will be different

from today's version in such a situation.

In Git 2.0, "git add <path>" will behave as "git add -A <path>", so

that "git add dir/" will notice paths you removed from the directory

and record the removal. Versions before Git 2.0, including this

release, will keep ignoring removals, but the users who rely on this

behaviour are encouraged to start using "git add --ignore-removal <path>"

now before 2.0 is released.

The default prefix for "git svn" will change in Git 2.0. For a long

time, "git svn" created its remote-tracking branches directly under

refs/remotes, but it will place them under refs/remotes/origin/ unless

it is told otherwise with its --prefix option.

Updates since v1.8.4

--------------------

Foreign interfaces, subsystems and ports.

* "git-svn" used with SVN 1.8.0 when talking over https:// connection

dumped core due to a bug in the serf library that SVN uses. Work

it around on our side, even though the SVN side is being fixed.

* On MacOS X, we detected if the filesystem needs the "pre-composed

unicode strings" workaround, but did not automatically enable it.

Now we do.

* remote-hg remote helper misbehaved when interacting with a local Hg

repository relative to the home directory, e.g. "clone hg::~/there".

* imap-send ported to OS X uses Apple's security framework instead of

OpenSSL one.

* Subversion 1.8.0 that was recently released breaks older subversion

clients coming over http/https in various ways.

* "git fast-import" treats an empty path given to "ls" as the root of

the tree.

UI, Workflows & Features

* xdg-open can be used as a browser backend for "git web-browse"

(hence to show "git help -w" output), when available.

* "git grep" and "git show" pays attention to "--textconv" option

when these commands are told to operate on blob objects (e.g. "git

grep -e pattern HEAD:Makefile").

* "git replace" helper no longer allows an object to be replaced with

another object of a different type to avoid confusion (you can

still manually craft such replacement using "git update-ref", as an

escape hatch).

* "git status" no longer prints dirty status information for

submodules for which submodule.$name.ignore is set to "all".

* "git rebase -i" honours core.abbrev when preparing the insn sheet

for editing.

* "git status" during a cherry-pick shows what original commit is

being picked.

* Instead of typing four capital letters "HEAD", you can say "@" now,

e.g. "git log @".

* "git check-ignore" follows the same rule as "git add" and "git

status" in that the ignore/exclude mechanism does not take effect

on paths that are already tracked. With "--no-index" option, it

can be used to diagnose which paths that should have been ignored

have been mistakenly added to the index.

* Some irrelevant "advice" messages that are shared with "git status"

output have been removed from the commit log template.

* "update-refs" learnt a "--stdin" option to read multiple update

requests and perform them in an all-or-none fashion.

* Just like "make -C <directory>", "git -C <directory> ..." tells Git

to go there before doing anything else.

* Just like "git checkout -" knows to check out and "git merge -"

knows to merge the branch you were previously on, "git cherry-pick"

now understands "git cherry-pick -" to pick from the previous

branch.

* "git status" now omits the prefix to make its output a comment in a

commit log editor, which is not necessary for human consumption.

Scripts that parse the output of "git status" are advised to use

"git status --porcelain" instead, as its format is stable and easier

to parse.

* Make "foo^{tag}" to peel a tag to itself, i.e. no-op., and fail if

"foo" is not a tag. "git rev-parse --verify v1.0^{tag}" would be

a more convenient way to say "test $(git cat-file -t v1.0) = tag".

* "git branch -v -v" (and "git status") did not distinguish among a

branch that does not build on any other branch, a branch that is in

sync with the branch it builds on, and a branch that is configured

to build on some other branch that no longer exists.

* Earlier we started rejecting an attempt to add 0{40} object name to

the index and to tree objects, but it sometimes is necessary to

allow so to be able to use tools like filter-branch to correct such

broken tree objects. "filter-branch" can again be used to to do

so.

* "git config" did not provide a way to set or access numbers larger

than a native "int" on the platform; it now provides 64-bit signed

integers on all platforms.

* "git pull --rebase" always chose to do the bog-standard flattening

rebase. You can tell it to run "rebase --preserve-merges" by

setting "pull.rebase" configuration to "preserve".

* "git push --no-thin" actually disables the "thin pack transfer"

optimization.

* Magic pathspecs like ":(icase)makefile" that matches both Makefile

and makefile and ":(glob)foo/**/bar" that matches "bar" in "foo"

and any subdirectory of "foo" can be used in more places.

* The "http.*" variables can now be specified per URL that the

configuration applies. For example,

[http]

sslVerify = true

[http "https://weak.example.com/&quot;]

sslVerify = false

would flip http.sslVerify off only when talking to that specified

site.

* "git mv A B" when moving a submodule A has been taught to

relocate its working tree and to adjust the paths in the

.gitmodules file.

* "git blame" can now take more than one -L option to discover the

origin of multiple blocks of the lines.

* The http transport clients can optionally ask to save cookies

with http.savecookies configuration variable.

* "git push" learned a more fine grained control over a blunt

"--force" when requesting a non-fast-forward update with the

"--force-with-lease=<refname>:<expected object name>" option.

* "git diff --diff-filter=<classes of changes>" can now take

lowercase letters (e.g. "--diff-filter=d") to mean "show

everything but these classes". "git diff-files -q" is now a

deprecated synonym for "git diff-files --diff-filter=d".

* "git fetch" (hence "git pull" as well) learned to check

"fetch.prune" and "remote.*.prune" configuration variables and

to behave as if the "--prune" command line option was given.

* "git check-ignore -z" applied the NUL termination to both its input

(with --stdin) and its output, but "git check-attr -z" ignored the

option on the output side. Make both honor -z on the input and

output side the same way.

* "git whatchanged" may still be used by old timers, but mention of

it in documents meant for new users will only waste readers' time

wonderig what the difference is between it and "git log". Make it

less prominent in the general part of the documentation and explain

that it is merely a "git log" with different default behaviour in

its own document.

Performance, Internal Implementation, etc.

* "git for-each-ref" when asking for merely the object name does not

have to parse the object pointed at by the refs; the codepath has

been optimized.

* The HTTP transport will try to use TCP keepalive when able.

* "git repack" is now written in C.

* Build procedure for MSVC has been updated.

* If a build-time fallback is set to "cat" instead of "less", we

should apply the same "no subprocess or pipe" optimization as we

apply to user-supplied GIT_PAGER=cat.

* Many commands use --dashed-option as a operation mode selector

(e.g. "git tag --delete") that the user can use at most one

(e.g. "git tag --delete --verify" is a nonsense) and you cannot

negate (e.g. "git tag --no-delete" is a nonsense). parse-options

API learned a new OPT_CMDMODE macro to make it easier to implement

such a set of options.

* OPT_BOOLEAN() in parse-options API was misdesigned to be "counting

up" but many subcommands expect it to behave as "on/off". Update

them to use OPT_BOOL() which is a proper boolean.

* "git gc" exits early without doing a double-work when it detects

that another instance of itself is already running.

* Under memory pressure and/or file descriptor pressure, we used to

close pack windows that are not used and also closed filehandle to

an open but unused packfiles. These are now controlled separately

to better cope with the load.

Also contains various documentation updates and code clean-ups.

Fixes since v1.8.4

------------------

Unless otherwise noted, all the fixes since v1.8.4 in the maintenance

track are contained in this release (see release notes to them for

details).

* An ancient How-To on serving Git repositories on an HTTP server

lacked a warning that it has been mostly superseded with more

modern way.

(merge 6d52bc3 sc/doc-howto-dumb-http later to maint).

* The interaction between use of Perl in our test suite and NO_PERL

has been clarified a bit.

(merge f8fc0ee jn/test-prereq-perl-doc later to maint).

* The synopsis section of "git unpack-objects" documentation has been

clarified a bit.

(merge 61e2e22 vd/doc-unpack-objects later to maint).

* We did not generate HTML version of documentation to "git subtree"

in contrib/.

(merge 95c62fb jk/subtree-install-fix later to maint).

* A fast-import stream expresses a pathname with funny characters by

quoting them in C style; remote-hg remote helper forgot to unquote

such a path.

(merge 1136265 ap/remote-hg-unquote-cquote later to maint).

* "git reset -p HEAD" has a codepath to special case it to behave

differently from resetting to contents of other commits, but a

recent change broke it.

* Coloring around octopus merges in "log --graph" output was screwy.

(merge 339c17b hn/log-graph-color-octopus later to maint).

* "git checkout topic", when there is not yet a local "topic" branch

but there is a unique remote-tracking branch for a remote "topic"

branch, pretended as if "git checkout -t -b topic remote/$r/topic"

(for that unique remote $r) was run. This hack however was not

implemented for "git checkout topic --".

(merge bca3969 mm/checkout-auto-track-fix later to maint).

* One long-standing flaw in the pack transfer protocol used by "git

clone" was that there was no way to tell the other end which branch

"HEAD" points at, and the receiving end needed to guess. A new

capability has been defined in the pack protocol to convey this

information so that cloning from a repository with more than one

branches pointing at the same commit where the HEAD is at now

reliably sets the initial branch in the resulting repository.

(merge 360a326 jc/upload-pack-send-symref later to maint).

* We did not handle cases where http transport gets redirected during

the authorization request (e.g. from http:// to https://).

(merge 70900ed jk/http-auth-redirects later to maint).

* Bash prompting code to deal with an SVN remote as an upstream

were coded in a way not supported by older Bash versions (3.x).

(merge 52ec889 sg/prompt-svn-remote-fix later to maint).

* The fall-back parsing of commit objects with broken author or

committer lines were less robust than ideal in picking up the

timestamps.

(merge 03818a4 jk/split-broken-ident later to maint).

* "git rev-list --objects ^v1.0^ v1.0" gave v1.0 tag itself in the

output, but "git rev-list --objects v1.0^..v1.0" did not.

(merge 895c5ba jc/revision-range-unpeel later to maint).

* "git clone" gave some progress messages to the standard output, not

to the standard error, and did not allow suppressing them with the

--no-progress option.

(merge 643f918 jk/clone-progress-to-stderr later to maint).

* "format-patch --from=<whom>" forgot to omit unnecessary in-body

from line, i.e. when <whom> is the same as the real author.

(merge 662cc30 jk/format-patch-from later to maint).

* "git shortlog" used to choke and die when there is a malformed

commit (e.g. missing authors); it now simply ignore such a commit

and keeps going.

(merge cd4f09e jk/shortlog-tolerate-broken-commit later to maint).

* "git merge-recursive" did not parse its "--diff-algorithm=" command

line option correctly.

(merge 6562928 jk/diff-algo later to maint).

* When running "fetch -q", a long silence while the sender side

computes the set of objects to send can be mistaken by proxies as

dropped connection. The server side has been taught to send a

small empty messages to keep the connection alive.

(merge 115dedd jk/upload-pack-keepalive later to maint).

* "git rebase" had a portability regression in v1.8.4 to trigger a

bug in some BSD shell implementations.

(merge 99855dd mm/rebase-continue-freebsd-WB later to maint).

* "git branch --track" had a minor regression in v1.8.3.2 and later

that made it impossible to base your local work on anything but a

local branch of the upstream repository you are tracking from.

(merge b0f49ff jh/checkout-auto-tracking later to maint).

* When the webserver responds with "405 Method Not Allowed", "git

http-backend" should tell the client what methods are allowed with

the "Allow" header.

(merge 9247be0 bc/http-backend-allow-405 later to maint).

* When there is no sufficient overlap between old and new history

during a "git fetch" into a shallow repository, objects that the

sending side knows the receiving end has were unnecessarily sent.

(merge f21d2a7 nd/fetch-into-shallow later to maint).

* "git cvsserver" computed the permission mode bits incorrectly for

executable files.

(merge 1b48d56 jc/cvsserver-perm-bit-fix later to maint).

* When send-email comes up with an error message to die with upon

failure to start an SSL session, it tried to read the error string

from a wrong place.

(merge 6cb0c88 bc/send-email-ssl-die-message-fix later to maint).

* The implementation of "add -i" has a crippling code to work around

ActiveState Perl limitation but it by mistake also triggered on Git

for Windows where MSYS perl is used.

(merge df17e77 js/add-i-mingw later to maint).

* We made sure that we notice the user-supplied GIT_DIR is actually a

gitfile, but did not do the same when the default ".git" is a

gitfile.

(merge 487a2b7 nd/git-dir-pointing-at-gitfile later to maint).

* When an object is not found after checking the packfiles and then

loose object directory, read_sha1_file() re-checks the packfiles to

prevent racing with a concurrent repacker; teach the same logic to

has_sha1_file().

(merge 45e8a74 jk/has-sha1-file-retry-packed later to maint).

* "git commit --author=$name", when $name is not in the canonical

"A. U. Thor <au.thor@example.xz>" format, looks for a matching name

from existing history, but did not consult mailmap to grab the

preferred author name.

(merge ea16794 ap/commit-author-mailmap later to maint).

* "git ls-files -k" needs to crawl only the part of the working tree

that may overlap the paths in the index to find killed files, but

shared code with the logic to find all the untracked files, which

made it unnecessarily inefficient.

(merge 680be04 jc/ls-files-killed-optim later to maint).

* The commit object names in the insn sheet that was prepared at the

beginning of "rebase -i" session can become ambiguous as the

rebasing progresses and the repository gains more commits. Make

sure the internal record is kept with full 40-hex object names.

(merge 75c6976 es/rebase-i-no-abbrev later to maint).

* "git rebase --preserve-merges" internally used the merge machinery

and as a side effect, left merge summary message in the log, but

when rebasing, there should not be a need for merge summary.

(merge a9f739c rt/rebase-p-no-merge-summary later to maint).

* A call to xread() was used without a loop around to cope with short

read in the codepath to stream new contents to a pack.

(merge e92527c js/xread-in-full later to maint).

* "git rebase -i" forgot that the comment character can be

configurable while reading its insn sheet.

(merge 7bca7af es/rebase-i-respect-core-commentchar later to maint).

* The mailmap support code read past the allocated buffer when the

mailmap file ended with an incomplete line.

(merge f972a16 jk/mailmap-incomplete-line later to maint).

* We used to send a large request to read(2)/write(2) as a single

system call, which was bad from the latency point of view when

the operation needs to be killed, and also triggered an error on

broken 64-bit systems that refuse to take more than 2GB read or

write in one go.

(merge a487916 sp/clip-read-write-to-8mb later to maint).

* "git fetch" that auto-followed tags incorrectly reused the

connection with Git-aware transport helper (like the sample "ext::"

helper shipped with Git).

(merge 0f73f8b jc/transport-do-not-use-connect-twice-in-fetch later to maint).

* "git log --full-diff -- <pathspec>" showed a huge diff for paths

outside the given <pathspec> for each commit, instead of showing

the change relative to the parent of the commit. "git reflog -p"

had a similar problem.

(merge 838f9a1 tr/log-full-diff-keep-true-parents later to maint).

* Setting submodule.*.path configuration variable to true (without

giving "= value") caused Git to segfault.

(merge 4b05440 jl/some-submodule-config-are-not-boolean later to maint).

* "git rebase -i" (there could be others, as the root cause is pretty

generic) fed a random, data dependeant string to 'echo' and

expects it to come out literally, corrupting its error message.

(merge 89b0230 mm/no-shell-escape-in-die-message later to maint).

* Some people still use rather old versions of bash, which cannot

grok some constructs like 'printf -v varname' the prompt and

completion code started to use recently.

(merge a44aa69 bc/completion-for-bash-3.0 later to maint).

* Code to read configuration from a blob object did not compile on

platforms with fgetc() etc. implemented as macros.

(merge 49d6cfa hv/config-from-blob later to maint-1.8.3).

* The recent "short-cut clone connectivity check" topic broke a

shallow repository when a fetch operation tries to auto-follow tags.

(merge 6da8bdc nd/fetch-pack-shallow-fix later to maint-1.8.3).

----------------------------------------------------------------

Changes since v1.8.5-rc1 are as follows:

Jason St. John (1):

Correct word usage of "timezone" in "Documentation" directory

Jean-Noel Avila (1):

l10n: fr.po 2194/1294 messages translated

Jiang Xin (2):

l10n: git.pot: v1.8.5 round 1 (68 new, 9 removed)

l10n: zh_CN.po: translate 68 messages (2194t0f0u)

Junio C Hamano (3):

Start preparing for 1.8.4.3

Git 1.8.4.3

Git 1.8.5-rc2

Karsten Blees (1):

gitignore.txt: fix documentation of "**" patterns

Peter Krefting (1):

l10n: Update Swedish translation (2194t0f0u)

Ralf Thielow (3):

po/TEAMS: update Thomas Rast's email address

l10n: de.po: translate 68 new messages

l10n: de.po: improve error message when pushing to unknown upstream

Tran Ngoc Quan (1):

l10n: vi.po (2194t): Update and minor fix

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