git/git-mergetool--lib.sh

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remove #!interpreter line from shell libraries In a shell snippet meant to be sourced by other shell scripts, an opening #! line does more harm than good. The harm: - When the shell library is sourced, the interpreter and options from the #! line are not used. Specifying a particular shell can confuse the reader into thinking it is safe for the shell library to rely on idiosyncrasies of that shell. - Using #! instead of a plain comment drops a helpful visual clue that this is a shell library and not a self-contained script. - Tools such as lintian can use a #! line to tell when an installation script has failed by forgetting to set a script executable. This check does not work if shell libraries also start with a #! line. The good: - Text editors notice the #! line and use it for syntax highlighting if you try to edit the installed scripts (without ".sh" suffix) in place. The use of the #! for file type detection is not needed because Git's shell libraries are meant to be edited in source form (with ".sh" suffix). Replace the opening #! lines with comments. This involves tweaking the test harness's valgrind support to find shell libraries by looking for "# " in the first line instead of "#!" (see v1.7.6-rc3~7, 2011-06-17). Suggested by Russ Allbery through lintian. Thanks to Jeff King and Clemens Buchacher for further analysis. Tested by searching for non-executable scripts with #! line: find . -name .git -prune -o -type f -not -executable | while read file do read line <"$file" case $line in '#!'*) echo "$file" ;; esac done The only remaining scripts found are templates for shell scripts (unimplemented.sh, wrap-for-bin.sh) and sample input used in tests (t/t4034/perl/{pre,post}). Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-25 22:03:52 +01:00
# git-mergetool--lib is a shell library for common merge tool functions
: ${MERGE_TOOLS_DIR=$(git --exec-path)/mergetools}
IFS='
'
mode_ok () {
if diff_mode
then
can_diff
elif merge_mode
then
can_merge
else
false
fi
}
is_available () {
merge_tool_path=$(translate_merge_tool_path "$1") &&
type "$merge_tool_path" >/dev/null 2>&1
}
list_config_tools () {
section=$1
line_prefix=${2:-}
git config --get-regexp $section'\..*\.cmd' |
while read -r key value
do
toolname=${key#$section.}
toolname=${toolname%.cmd}
printf "%s%s\n" "$line_prefix" "$toolname"
done
}
show_tool_names () {
condition=${1:-true} per_line_prefix=${2:-} preamble=${3:-}
not_found_msg=${4:-}
extra_content=${5:-}
shown_any=
( cd "$MERGE_TOOLS_DIR" && ls ) | {
while read scriptname
do
setup_tool "$scriptname" 2>/dev/null
mergetool--lib: fix '--tool-help' to correctly show available tools Commit 83bbf9b92e (mergetool--lib: improve support for vimdiff-style tool variants, 2020-07-29) introduced a regression in the output of `git mergetool --tool-help` and `git difftool --tool-help` [1]. In function 'show_tool_names' in git-mergetool--lib.sh, we loop over the supported mergetools and their variants and accumulate them in the variable 'variants', separating them with a literal '\n'. The code then uses 'echo $variants' to turn these '\n' into newlines, but this behaviour is not portable, it just happens to work in some shells, like dash(1)'s 'echo' builtin. For shells in which 'echo' does not turn '\n' into newlines, the end result is that the only tools that are shown are the existing variants (except the last variant alphabetically), since the variants are separated by actual newlines in '$variants' because of the several 'echo' calls in mergetools/{bc,vimdiff}::list_tool_variants. Fix this bug by embedding an actual line feed into `variants` in show_tool_names(). While at it, replace `sort | uniq` by `sort -u`. To prevent future regressions, add a simple test that checks that a few known tools are correctly shown (let's avoid counting the total number of tools to lessen the maintenance burden when new tools are added or if '--tool-help' learns additional logic, like hiding tools depending on the current platform). [1] https://lore.kernel.org/git/CADtb9DyozjgAsdFYL8fFBEWmq7iz4=prZYVUdH9W-J5CKVS4OA@mail.gmail.com/ Reported-by: Philippe Blain <levraiphilippeblain@gmail.com> Based-on-patch-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org> Signed-off-by: Philippe Blain <levraiphilippeblain@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2021-01-07 02:09:05 +01:00
# We need an actual line feed here
variants="$variants
$(list_tool_variants)"
done
mergetool--lib: fix '--tool-help' to correctly show available tools Commit 83bbf9b92e (mergetool--lib: improve support for vimdiff-style tool variants, 2020-07-29) introduced a regression in the output of `git mergetool --tool-help` and `git difftool --tool-help` [1]. In function 'show_tool_names' in git-mergetool--lib.sh, we loop over the supported mergetools and their variants and accumulate them in the variable 'variants', separating them with a literal '\n'. The code then uses 'echo $variants' to turn these '\n' into newlines, but this behaviour is not portable, it just happens to work in some shells, like dash(1)'s 'echo' builtin. For shells in which 'echo' does not turn '\n' into newlines, the end result is that the only tools that are shown are the existing variants (except the last variant alphabetically), since the variants are separated by actual newlines in '$variants' because of the several 'echo' calls in mergetools/{bc,vimdiff}::list_tool_variants. Fix this bug by embedding an actual line feed into `variants` in show_tool_names(). While at it, replace `sort | uniq` by `sort -u`. To prevent future regressions, add a simple test that checks that a few known tools are correctly shown (let's avoid counting the total number of tools to lessen the maintenance burden when new tools are added or if '--tool-help' learns additional logic, like hiding tools depending on the current platform). [1] https://lore.kernel.org/git/CADtb9DyozjgAsdFYL8fFBEWmq7iz4=prZYVUdH9W-J5CKVS4OA@mail.gmail.com/ Reported-by: Philippe Blain <levraiphilippeblain@gmail.com> Based-on-patch-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org> Signed-off-by: Philippe Blain <levraiphilippeblain@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2021-01-07 02:09:05 +01:00
variants="$(echo "$variants" | sort -u)"
for toolname in $variants
do
if setup_tool "$toolname" 2>/dev/null &&
(eval "$condition" "$toolname")
then
if test -n "$preamble"
then
printf "%s\n" "$preamble"
preamble=
fi
shown_any=yes
printf "%s%-15s %s\n" "$per_line_prefix" "$toolname" $(diff_mode && diff_cmd_help "$toolname" || merge_cmd_help "$toolname")
fi
done
if test -n "$extra_content"
then
if test -n "$preamble"
then
# Note: no '\n' here since we don't want a
# blank line if there is no initial content.
printf "%s" "$preamble"
preamble=
fi
shown_any=yes
printf "\n%s\n" "$extra_content"
fi
if test -n "$preamble" && test -n "$not_found_msg"
then
printf "%s\n" "$not_found_msg"
fi
test -n "$shown_any"
}
}
diff_mode () {
test "$TOOL_MODE" = diff
}
merge_mode () {
test "$TOOL_MODE" = merge
}
mergetool: new config guiDefault supports auto-toggling gui by DISPLAY When no merge.tool or diff.tool is configured or manually selected, the selection of a default tool is sensitive to the DISPLAY variable; in a GUI session a gui-specific tool will be proposed if found, and otherwise a terminal-based one. This "GUI-optimizing" behavior is important because a GUI can make a huge difference to a user's ability to understand and correctly complete a non-trivial conflicting merge. Some time ago the merge.guitool and diff.guitool config options were introduced to enable users to configure both a GUI tool, and a non-GUI tool (with fallback if no GUI tool configured), in the same environment. Unfortunately, the --gui argument introduced to support the selection of the guitool is still explicit. When using configured tools, there is no equivalent of the no-tool-configured "propose a GUI tool if we are in a GUI environment" behavior. As proposed in <xmqqmtb8jsej.fsf@gitster.g>, introduce new configuration options, difftool.guiDefault and mergetool.guiDefault, supporting a special value "auto" which causes the corresponding tool or guitool to be selected depending on the presence of a non-empty DISPLAY value. Also support "true" to say "default to the guitool (unless --no-gui is passed on the commandline)", and "false" as the previous default behavior when these new configuration options are not specified. Signed-off-by: Tao Klerks <tao@klerks.biz> Acked-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2023-03-18 16:27:43 +01:00
get_gui_default () {
if diff_mode
then
GUI_DEFAULT_KEY="difftool.guiDefault"
else
GUI_DEFAULT_KEY="mergetool.guiDefault"
fi
GUI_DEFAULT_CONFIG_LCASE=$(git config --default false --get "$GUI_DEFAULT_KEY" | tr 'A-Z' 'a-z')
if test "$GUI_DEFAULT_CONFIG_LCASE" = "auto"
then
if test -n "$DISPLAY"
then
GUI_DEFAULT=true
else
GUI_DEFAULT=false
fi
else
GUI_DEFAULT=$(git config --default false --bool --get "$GUI_DEFAULT_KEY")
subshell_exit_status=$?
if test $subshell_exit_status -ne 0
then
exit $subshell_exit_status
fi
fi
echo $GUI_DEFAULT
}
gui_mode () {
mergetool: new config guiDefault supports auto-toggling gui by DISPLAY When no merge.tool or diff.tool is configured or manually selected, the selection of a default tool is sensitive to the DISPLAY variable; in a GUI session a gui-specific tool will be proposed if found, and otherwise a terminal-based one. This "GUI-optimizing" behavior is important because a GUI can make a huge difference to a user's ability to understand and correctly complete a non-trivial conflicting merge. Some time ago the merge.guitool and diff.guitool config options were introduced to enable users to configure both a GUI tool, and a non-GUI tool (with fallback if no GUI tool configured), in the same environment. Unfortunately, the --gui argument introduced to support the selection of the guitool is still explicit. When using configured tools, there is no equivalent of the no-tool-configured "propose a GUI tool if we are in a GUI environment" behavior. As proposed in <xmqqmtb8jsej.fsf@gitster.g>, introduce new configuration options, difftool.guiDefault and mergetool.guiDefault, supporting a special value "auto" which causes the corresponding tool or guitool to be selected depending on the presence of a non-empty DISPLAY value. Also support "true" to say "default to the guitool (unless --no-gui is passed on the commandline)", and "false" as the previous default behavior when these new configuration options are not specified. Signed-off-by: Tao Klerks <tao@klerks.biz> Acked-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2023-03-18 16:27:43 +01:00
if test -z "$GIT_MERGETOOL_GUI"
then
GIT_MERGETOOL_GUI=$(get_gui_default)
if test $? -ne 0
then
exit 2
fi
fi
test "$GIT_MERGETOOL_GUI" = true
}
translate_merge_tool_path () {
echo "$1"
}
check_unchanged () {
if test "$MERGED" -nt "$BACKUP"
then
return 0
else
while true
do
echo "$MERGED seems unchanged."
printf "Was the merge successful [y/n]? "
read answer || return 1
case "$answer" in
y*|Y*) return 0 ;;
n*|N*) return 1 ;;
esac
done
fi
}
valid_tool () {
setup_tool "$1" && return 0
cmd=$(get_merge_tool_cmd "$1")
test -n "$cmd"
}
setup_user_tool () {
merge_tool_cmd=$(get_merge_tool_cmd "$tool")
test -n "$merge_tool_cmd" || return 1
diff_cmd () {
( eval $merge_tool_cmd )
}
merge_cmd () {
( eval $merge_tool_cmd )
}
list_tool_variants () {
echo "$tool"
}
}
setup_tool () {
tool="$1"
# Fallback definitions, to be overridden by tools.
can_merge () {
return 0
}
can_diff () {
return 0
}
diff_cmd () {
return 1
}
diff_cmd_help () {
return 0
}
merge_cmd () {
return 1
}
merge_cmd_help () {
return 0
}
hide_resolved_enabled () {
return 0
}
translate_merge_tool_path () {
echo "$1"
}
list_tool_variants () {
echo "$tool"
}
# Most tools' exit codes cannot be trusted, so By default we ignore
# their exit code and check the merged file's modification time in
# check_unchanged() to determine whether or not the merge was
# successful. The return value from run_merge_cmd, by default, is
# determined by check_unchanged().
#
# When a tool's exit code can be trusted then the return value from
# run_merge_cmd is simply the tool's exit code, and check_unchanged()
# is not called.
#
# The return value of exit_code_trustable() tells us whether or not we
# can trust the tool's exit code.
#
# User-defined and built-in tools default to false.
# Built-in tools advertise that their exit code is trustable by
# redefining exit_code_trustable() to true.
exit_code_trustable () {
false
}
if test -f "$MERGE_TOOLS_DIR/$tool"
then
. "$MERGE_TOOLS_DIR/$tool"
elif test -f "$MERGE_TOOLS_DIR/${tool%[0-9]}"
then
. "$MERGE_TOOLS_DIR/${tool%[0-9]}"
else
setup_user_tool
return $?
fi
# Now let the user override the default command for the tool. If
# they have not done so then this will return 1 which we ignore.
setup_user_tool
if ! list_tool_variants | grep -q "^$tool$"
then
return 1
fi
if merge_mode && ! can_merge
then
echo "error: '$tool' can not be used to resolve merges" >&2
return 1
elif diff_mode && ! can_diff
then
echo "error: '$tool' can only be used to resolve merges" >&2
return 1
fi
return 0
}
get_merge_tool_cmd () {
merge_tool="$1"
if diff_mode
then
git config "difftool.$merge_tool.cmd" ||
git config "mergetool.$merge_tool.cmd"
else
git config "mergetool.$merge_tool.cmd"
fi
}
trust_exit_code () {
if git config --bool "mergetool.$1.trustExitCode"
then
:; # OK
elif exit_code_trustable
then
echo true
else
echo false
fi
}
initialize_merge_tool () {
# Bring tool-specific functions into scope
setup_tool "$1" || return 1
}
# Entry point for running tools
run_merge_tool () {
# If GIT_PREFIX is empty then we cannot use it in tools
# that expect to be able to chdir() to its value.
GIT_PREFIX=${GIT_PREFIX:-.}
export GIT_PREFIX
merge_tool_path=$(get_merge_tool_path "$1") || exit
base_present="$2"
if merge_mode
then
run_merge_cmd "$1"
else
run_diff_cmd "$1"
fi
}
# Run a either a configured or built-in diff tool
run_diff_cmd () {
diff_cmd "$1"
}
# Run a either a configured or built-in merge tool
run_merge_cmd () {
mergetool_trust_exit_code=$(trust_exit_code "$1")
if test "$mergetool_trust_exit_code" = "true"
then
merge_cmd "$1"
else
touch "$BACKUP"
merge_cmd "$1"
check_unchanged
fi
}
list_merge_tool_candidates () {
if merge_mode
then
tools="tortoisemerge"
else
tools="kompare"
fi
if test -n "$DISPLAY"
then
if test -n "$GNOME_DESKTOP_SESSION_ID"
then
tools="meld opendiff kdiff3 tkdiff xxdiff $tools"
else
tools="opendiff kdiff3 tkdiff xxdiff meld $tools"
fi
tools="$tools gvimdiff diffuse diffmerge ecmerge"
tools="$tools p4merge araxis bc codecompare"
tools="$tools smerge"
fi
case "${VISUAL:-$EDITOR}" in
*nvim*)
tools="$tools nvimdiff vimdiff emerge"
;;
*vim*)
tools="$tools vimdiff nvimdiff emerge"
;;
*)
tools="$tools emerge vimdiff nvimdiff"
;;
esac
}
show_tool_help () {
tool_opt="'git ${TOOL_MODE}tool --tool=<tool>'"
tab=' '
LF='
'
any_shown=no
cmd_name=${TOOL_MODE}tool
config_tools=$({
diff_mode && list_config_tools difftool "$tab$tab"
list_config_tools mergetool "$tab$tab"
} | sort)
extra_content=
if test -n "$config_tools"
then
extra_content="${tab}user-defined:${LF}$config_tools"
fi
show_tool_names 'mode_ok && is_available' "$tab$tab" \
"$tool_opt may be set to one of the following:" \
"No suitable tool for 'git $cmd_name --tool=<tool>' found." \
"$extra_content" &&
any_shown=yes
show_tool_names 'mode_ok && ! is_available' "$tab$tab" \
"${LF}The following tools are valid, but not currently available:" &&
any_shown=yes
if test "$any_shown" = yes
then
echo
echo "Some of the tools listed above only work in a windowed"
echo "environment. If run in a terminal-only session, they will fail."
fi
exit 0
}
guess_merge_tool () {
list_merge_tool_candidates
cat >&2 <<-EOF
This message is displayed because '$TOOL_MODE.tool' is not configured.
See 'git ${TOOL_MODE}tool --tool-help' or 'git help config' for more details.
'git ${TOOL_MODE}tool' will now attempt to use one of the following tools:
$tools
EOF
# Loop over each candidate and stop when a valid merge tool is found.
IFS=' '
for tool in $tools
do
is_available "$tool" && echo "$tool" && return 0
done
echo >&2 "No known ${TOOL_MODE} tool is available."
return 1
}
get_configured_merge_tool () {
keys=
if diff_mode
then
if gui_mode
then
keys="diff.guitool merge.guitool diff.tool merge.tool"
else
keys="diff.tool merge.tool"
fi
else
if gui_mode
then
keys="merge.guitool merge.tool"
else
keys="merge.tool"
fi
fi
merge_tool=$(
IFS=' '
for key in $keys
do
selected=$(git config $key)
if test -n "$selected"
then
echo "$selected"
return
fi
done)
if test -n "$merge_tool" && ! valid_tool "$merge_tool"
then
echo >&2 "git config option $TOOL_MODE.${gui_prefix}tool set to unknown tool: $merge_tool"
echo >&2 "Resetting to default..."
return 1
fi
echo "$merge_tool"
}
get_merge_tool_path () {
# A merge tool has been set, so verify that it's valid.
merge_tool="$1"
if ! valid_tool "$merge_tool"
then
echo >&2 "Unknown merge tool $merge_tool"
exit 1
fi
if diff_mode
then
merge_tool_path=$(git config difftool."$merge_tool".path ||
git config mergetool."$merge_tool".path)
else
merge_tool_path=$(git config mergetool."$merge_tool".path)
fi
if test -z "$merge_tool_path"
then
merge_tool_path=$(translate_merge_tool_path "$merge_tool")
fi
if test -z "$(get_merge_tool_cmd "$merge_tool")" &&
! type "$merge_tool_path" >/dev/null 2>&1
then
echo >&2 "The $TOOL_MODE tool $merge_tool is not available as"\
"'$merge_tool_path'"
exit 1
fi
echo "$merge_tool_path"
}
get_merge_tool () {
is_guessed=false
# Check if a merge tool has been configured
merge_tool=$(get_configured_merge_tool)
mergetool: new config guiDefault supports auto-toggling gui by DISPLAY When no merge.tool or diff.tool is configured or manually selected, the selection of a default tool is sensitive to the DISPLAY variable; in a GUI session a gui-specific tool will be proposed if found, and otherwise a terminal-based one. This "GUI-optimizing" behavior is important because a GUI can make a huge difference to a user's ability to understand and correctly complete a non-trivial conflicting merge. Some time ago the merge.guitool and diff.guitool config options were introduced to enable users to configure both a GUI tool, and a non-GUI tool (with fallback if no GUI tool configured), in the same environment. Unfortunately, the --gui argument introduced to support the selection of the guitool is still explicit. When using configured tools, there is no equivalent of the no-tool-configured "propose a GUI tool if we are in a GUI environment" behavior. As proposed in <xmqqmtb8jsej.fsf@gitster.g>, introduce new configuration options, difftool.guiDefault and mergetool.guiDefault, supporting a special value "auto" which causes the corresponding tool or guitool to be selected depending on the presence of a non-empty DISPLAY value. Also support "true" to say "default to the guitool (unless --no-gui is passed on the commandline)", and "false" as the previous default behavior when these new configuration options are not specified. Signed-off-by: Tao Klerks <tao@klerks.biz> Acked-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2023-03-18 16:27:43 +01:00
subshell_exit_status=$?
if test $subshell_exit_status -gt "1"
then
exit $subshell_exit_status
fi
# Try to guess an appropriate merge tool if no tool has been set.
if test -z "$merge_tool"
then
merge_tool=$(guess_merge_tool) || exit
is_guessed=true
fi
echo "$merge_tool"
test "$is_guessed" = false
}
mergetool_find_win32_cmd () {
executable=$1
sub_directory=$2
# Use $executable if it exists in $PATH
if type -p "$executable" >/dev/null 2>&1
then
printf '%s' "$executable"
return
fi
# Look for executable in the typical locations
for directory in $(env | grep -Ei '^PROGRAM(FILES(\(X86\))?|W6432)=' |
cut -d '=' -f 2- | sort -u)
do
if test -n "$directory" && test -x "$directory/$sub_directory/$executable"
then
printf '%s' "$directory/$sub_directory/$executable"
return
fi
done
printf '%s' "$executable"
}