Commits


portable: configure: split out dependencies Rather than assume all dependencies are required for all programs, split them out. This will make packaging easier, as well as splitting the code to use subprojects. Note that due to the use of config.h semantics, in most cases the got_compat.h header file is now at the top of the .c file it is included in, so that it can handle the system header inclusion properly.


add some helper functions to compute hashes This adds a set of functions to abstract over SHA1Init, SHA1Update, SHA1Final, their respective SHA256 variants and how to compare digests. Replace all the SHA1*() usage with the new APIs. It's a preparatory step for sha256 handling. ok stsp@


portable: rework SHA detection Simply the SHA detection by not predicating on libcrypto, but instead checking individual header files.


portable: remove sha1.h; found portably Remove sha1.h as this is found portably across systems.


provide functions to parse/serialize different hashes it abstracts over the hash type and ensures that object ids are zero'ed before their sha1 digest is written. Needed by the incoming sha256 support. ok stsp@


rename lib/sha1.c to lib/hash.c It will soon grow functions to deal with sha256 too. stsp@ agrees.


include sha2.h too where sha1.h is included In preparation for wide sha256 support; stsp@ agrees. Change done mechanically with find . -iname \*.[cy] -exec sam {} + X ,x/<sha1\.h>/i/\n#include <sha2.h>


introduce got_error_checksum ok stsp@


introduce got_object_id_hex to replace some got_sha1_digest_to_str() It's an analogous to got_object_id_str but writes to the given buffer. ok + improvements by stsp@


use got_object_id_cmp instad of memcmp where possible in object_parse.c ok stsp@


fix typo: overlapping comparison always evaluates false ok stsp@


always cast ctype' is*() arguments to unsigned char ok stsp@


remove trailing whitespace; patch by Josiah Frentsos


introduce gotd(8), a Git repository server reachable via ssh(1) This is an initial barebones implementation which provides the absolute minimum of functionality required to serve got(1) and git(1) clients. Basic fetch/send functionality has been tested and seems to work here, but this server is not yet expected to be stable. More testing is welcome. See the man pages for setup instructions. The current design uses one reader and one writer process per repository, which will have to be extended to N readers and N writers in the future. At startup, each process will chroot(2) into its assigned repository. This works because gotd(8) can only be started as root, and will then fork+exec, chroot, and privdrop. At present the parent process runs with the following pledge(2) promises: "stdio rpath wpath cpath proc getpw sendfd recvfd fattr flock unix unveil" The parent is the only process able to modify the repository in a way that becomes visible to Git clients. The parent uses unveil(2) to restrict its view of the filesystem to /tmp and the repositories listed in the configuration file gotd.conf(5). Per-repository chroot(2) processes use "stdio rpath sendfd recvfd". The writer defers to the parent for modifying references in the repository to point at newly uploaded commits. The reader is fine without such help, because Git repositories can be read without having to create any lock-files. gotd(8) requires a dedicated user ID, which should own repositories on the filesystem, and a separate secondary group, which should not have filesystem-level repository access, and must be allowed access to the gotd(8) socket. To obtain Git repository access, users must be members of this secondary group, and must have their login shell set to gotsh(1). gotsh(1) connects to the gotd(8) socket and speaks Git-protocol towards the client on the other end of the SSH connection. gotsh(1) is not an interactive command shell. At present, authenticated clients are granted read/write access to all repositories and all references (except for the "refs/got/" and the "refs/remotes/" namespaces, which are already being protected from modification). While complicated access control mechanism are not a design goal, making it possible to safely offer anonymous Git repository access over ssh(1) is on the road map.


allow got_object_parse_tree to reuse entries buffer allocations for speed ok millert@


remove unnecessary includes of got_lib_privsep.h


remove trailing whitespace; patch by Josiah Frentsos


portable: add back sys/queue.h Now that the handling of including sys/queue.h is better, there's no need to remove those lines from the source. Copy the location of those original sys/queue.h lines from upstream at the same line number, so as to avoid any conflicts in the future.


parse tree entries into an array instead of a pathlist Avoids some extra malloc/free in a performance-critical path. ok op@


inline struct got_object_id in struct got_object_qid Saves us from doing a malloc/free call for every item on the list. ok op@


fix loose object file header parser for zero-length headers ok millert tracey


map raw object files into memory while packing if possible


portable: tree/queue header fixes sys/{tree,queue}.h are looked up via configure, and therefore are included via that mechanism.


Revert "cache raw objects in order to speed up gotadmin pack" This reverts commit c565dfd37a157bab9556aceac96ff27d64525fc9.


cache raw objects in order to speed up gotadmin pack