Revision aba91192ae39cd1a2f79e7ed91e966df3cfe10b7 authored by Carlos Rica on 09 September 2007, 00:39:29 UTC, committed by Junio C Hamano on 10 September 2007, 04:30:54 UTC
Most of this patch code and message was written by Shawn O. Pearce. I made some tests to know what the problem was, and then I changed the code related with the SIGPIPE signal. If the user has misconfigured `user.signingkey` in their .git/config or just doesn't have any secret keys on their keyring and they ask for a signed tag with `git tag -s` we better make sure the resulting tag was actually signed by gpg. Prior versions of builtin git-tag allowed this failure to slip by without error as they were not checking the return value of the finish_command() so they did not notice when gpg exited with an error exit status. They also did not fail if gpg produced an empty output or if read_in_full received an error from the read system call while trying to read the pipe back from gpg. Finally, we did not actually honor any return value from the do_sign function as it returns ssize_t but was being stored into an unsigned long. This caused the compiler to optimize out the die condition, allowing git-tag to continue along and create the tag object. However, when gpg gets a wrong username, it exits before any read was done and then the writing process receives SIGPIPE and program is terminated. By ignoring this signal, anyway, the function write_or_die gets EPIPE from write_in_full and exits returning 0 to the system without a message. Here we better call to write_in_full directly so we can fail printing a message and return safely to the caller. With these issues fixed `git-tag -s` will now fail to create the tag and will report a non-zero exit status to its caller, thereby allowing automated helper scripts to detect (and recover from) failure if gpg is not working properly. Proposed-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org> Signed-off-by: Carlos Rica <jasampler@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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dir.h
#ifndef DIR_H
#define DIR_H
/*
* We maintain three exclude pattern lists:
* EXC_CMDL lists patterns explicitly given on the command line.
* EXC_DIRS lists patterns obtained from per-directory ignore files.
* EXC_FILE lists patterns from fallback ignore files.
*/
#define EXC_CMDL 0
#define EXC_DIRS 1
#define EXC_FILE 2
struct dir_entry {
unsigned int len;
char name[FLEX_ARRAY]; /* more */
};
struct exclude_list {
int nr;
int alloc;
struct exclude {
const char *pattern;
const char *base;
int baselen;
} **excludes;
};
struct dir_struct {
int nr, alloc;
int ignored_nr, ignored_alloc;
unsigned int show_ignored:1,
show_other_directories:1,
hide_empty_directories:1,
no_gitlinks:1,
collect_ignored:1;
struct dir_entry **entries;
struct dir_entry **ignored;
/* Exclude info */
const char *exclude_per_dir;
struct exclude_list exclude_list[3];
};
extern int common_prefix(const char **pathspec);
#define MATCHED_RECURSIVELY 1
#define MATCHED_FNMATCH 2
#define MATCHED_EXACTLY 3
extern int match_pathspec(const char **pathspec, const char *name, int namelen, int prefix, char *seen);
extern int read_directory(struct dir_struct *, const char *path, const char *base, int baselen, const char **pathspec);
extern int push_exclude_per_directory(struct dir_struct *, const char *, int);
extern void pop_exclude_per_directory(struct dir_struct *, int);
extern int excluded(struct dir_struct *, const char *);
extern void add_excludes_from_file(struct dir_struct *, const char *fname);
extern void add_exclude(const char *string, const char *base,
int baselen, struct exclude_list *which);
extern int file_exists(const char *);
extern struct dir_entry *dir_add_name(struct dir_struct *dir, const char *pathname, int len);
extern char *get_relative_cwd(char *buffer, int size, const char *dir);
extern int is_inside_dir(const char *dir);
#endif
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