@@ -433,6 +433,10 @@ the input. The exit status of the 'proc-receive' hook only determines
the success or failure of the group of commands sent to it, unless
atomic push is in use.
+It is forbidden to specify more than one hook for 'proc-receive'. If a
+globally-configured 'proc-receive' must be overridden, use
+'hookcmd.<global-hook>.skip = true' to ignore it.
+
[[post-receive]]
post-receive
~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -1147,11 +1147,38 @@ static int run_proc_receive_hook(struct command *commands,
int version = 0;
int code;
- argv[0] = find_hook("proc-receive");
- if (!argv[0]) {
+ struct hook *proc_receive = NULL;
+ struct list_head *pos, *hooks;
+
+ hooks = hook_list("proc-receive");
+
+ list_for_each(pos, hooks) {
+ if (proc_receive) {
+ rp_error("only one 'proc-receive' hook can be specified");
+ return -1;
+ }
+ proc_receive = list_entry(pos, struct hook, list);
+ /* check if the hookdir hook should be ignored */
+ if (proc_receive->from_hookdir) {
+ switch (configured_hookdir_opt()) {
+ case HOOKDIR_INTERACTIVE:
+ case HOOKDIR_NO:
+ proc_receive = NULL;
+ break;
+ default:
+ break;
+ }
+ }
+
+ }
+
+ if (!proc_receive) {
rp_error("cannot find hook 'proc-receive'");
return -1;
}
+
+
+ argv[0] = proc_receive->command.buf;
argv[1] = NULL;
proc.argv = argv;
new file mode 100644
@@ -0,0 +1,47 @@
+test_expect_success "setup too many proc-receive hooks (ok, $PROTOCOL)" '
+ write_script "proc-receive" <<-EOF &&
+ printf >&2 "# proc-receive hook\n"
+ test-tool proc-receive -v \
+ -r "ok refs/for/main/topic"
+ EOF
+
+ git -C "$upstream" config --add "hook.proc-receive.command" proc-receive &&
+ cp proc-receive "$upstream/hooks/proc-receive"
+'
+
+# Refs of upstream : main(A)
+# Refs of workbench: main(A) tags/v123
+# git push : next(A) refs/for/main/topic(A)
+test_expect_success "proc-receive: reject more than one configured hook" '
+ test_must_fail git -C workbench push origin \
+ HEAD:next \
+ HEAD:refs/for/main/topic \
+ >out 2>&1 &&
+ make_user_friendly_and_stable_output <out >actual &&
+ cat >expect <<-EOF &&
+ remote: # pre-receive hook
+ remote: pre-receive< <ZERO-OID> <COMMIT-A> refs/heads/next
+ remote: pre-receive< <ZERO-OID> <COMMIT-A> refs/for/main/topic
+ remote: error: only one "proc-receive" hook can be specified
+ remote: # post-receive hook
+ remote: post-receive< <ZERO-OID> <COMMIT-A> refs/heads/next
+ To <URL/of/upstream.git>
+ * [new branch] HEAD -> next
+ ! [remote rejected] HEAD -> refs/for/main/topic (fail to run proc-receive hook)
+ EOF
+ test_cmp expect actual &&
+ git -C "$upstream" show-ref >out &&
+ make_user_friendly_and_stable_output <out >actual &&
+ cat >expect <<-EOF &&
+ <COMMIT-A> refs/heads/main
+ <COMMIT-A> refs/heads/next
+ EOF
+ test_cmp expect actual
+'
+
+# Refs of upstream : main(A) next(A)
+# Refs of workbench: main(A) tags/v123
+test_expect_success "cleanup ($PROTOCOL)" '
+ git -C "$upstream" config --unset "hook.proc-receive.command" "proc-receive" &&
+ git -C "$upstream" update-ref -d refs/heads/next
+'
The proc-receive hook differs from most other hooks Git invokes because the hook and the parent Git process engage in bidirectional communication via stdin/stdout. This bidirectional communication is unsuitable for multiple hooks, whether they are in series or in parallel, and is incompatible with run-command.h:run_processes_parallel: - The proc-receive hook is intended to modify the state of the Git repo. From 'git help githooks': This [proc-receive] hook is responsible for updating the relevant references and reporting the results back to 'receive-pack'. This prevents parallelization and implies, at least, specific ordering of hook execution. - The proc-receive hook can reject a push by aborting early with an error code. If a former hook ran through the entire push contents successfully but a later hook rejects some of the push, the repo may be left in a partially-updated (and corrupt) state. - The callback model of the run_processes_parallel() API is unsuited to the current implementation of proc-receive, which loops through "send-receive-consider" with the child process. proc-receive today relies on stateful communication with the child process, which would be unwieldy to implement with callbacks and saved state. - Additionally, run_processes_parallel() is designed to collate the output of many child processes into a single output (stderr or callback), and would require significant work to tell the caller which process sent the output, and indeed to collect any output before the child process has exited. So, rather than using hook.h:run_hooks() to invoke the proc-receive hook, receive-pack.c can learn to ask hook.h:hook_list() for the location of a hook to run. This allows users to configure their proc-receive in a global config for all repos if they want, or a local config if they just don't want to use the hookdir. Because running more than one proc-receive hook doesn't make sense from a repo state perspective, we can explicitly ban configuring more than one proc-receive hook at a time. If a user wants to globally configure one proc-receive hook for most of their repos, but override that hook in a single repo, they should use 'skip' to manually remove the global hook in their special repo: ~/.gitconfig: [hook.proc-receive] command = /usr/bin/usual-proc-receive ~/special-repo/.git/config: [hookcmd./usr/bin/usual-proc-receive] skip = true [hook.proc-receive] command = /usr/bin/special-proc-receive Signed-off-by: Emily Shaffer <emilyshaffer@google.com> --- Documentation/githooks.txt | 4 ++ builtin/receive-pack.c | 31 ++++++++++++++- t/t5411/test-0015-too-many-hooks-error.sh | 47 +++++++++++++++++++++++ 3 files changed, 80 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) create mode 100644 t/t5411/test-0015-too-many-hooks-error.sh