@@ -139,44 +139,59 @@ test_expect_success 'index-pack --strict works for non-repo pack' '
grep gitmodulesName output
'
-test_expect_success 'set up repo with symlinked .gitmodules file' '
- git init symlink &&
- (
- cd symlink &&
-
- # Make the tree directly to avoid index restrictions.
- #
- # Because symlinks store the target as a blob, choose
- # a pathname that could be parsed as a .gitmodules file
- # to trick naive non-symlink-aware checking.
- tricky="[foo]bar=true" &&
- content=$(git hash-object -w ../.gitmodules) &&
- target=$(printf "$tricky" | git hash-object -w --stdin) &&
- {
- printf "100644 blob $content\t$tricky\n" &&
- printf "120000 blob $target\t.gitmodules\n"
- } >bad-tree
- ) &&
- tree=$(git -C symlink mktree <symlink/bad-tree)
-'
-
-test_expect_success 'fsck detects symlinked .gitmodules file' '
- (
- cd symlink &&
-
- # Check not only that we fail, but that it is due to the
- # symlink detector
- test_must_fail git fsck 2>output &&
- grep "tree $tree: gitmodulesSymlink" output
- )
-'
-
-test_expect_success 'refuse to load symlinked .gitmodules into index' '
- test_must_fail git -C symlink read-tree $tree 2>err &&
- test_i18ngrep "invalid path.*gitmodules" err &&
- git -C symlink ls-files >out &&
- test_must_be_empty out
-'
+check_dotx_symlink () {
+ name=$1
+ type=$2
+ path=$3
+ dir=symlink-$name-$type
+
+ test_expect_success "set up repo with symlinked $name ($type)" '
+ git init $dir &&
+ (
+ cd $dir &&
+
+ # Make the tree directly to avoid index restrictions.
+ #
+ # Because symlinks store the target as a blob, choose
+ # a pathname that could be parsed as a .gitmodules file
+ # to trick naive non-symlink-aware checking.
+ tricky="[foo]bar=true" &&
+ content=$(git hash-object -w ../.gitmodules) &&
+ target=$(printf "$tricky" | git hash-object -w --stdin) &&
+ {
+ printf "100644 blob $content\t$tricky\n" &&
+ printf "120000 blob $target\t$path\n"
+ } >bad-tree
+ ) &&
+ tree=$(git -C $dir mktree <$dir/bad-tree)
+ '
+
+ test_expect_success "fsck detects symlinked $name ($type)" '
+ (
+ cd $dir &&
+
+ # Check not only that we fail, but that it is due to the
+ # symlink detector
+ test_must_fail git fsck 2>output &&
+ grep "tree $tree: ${name}Symlink" output
+ )
+ '
+
+ test_expect_success "refuse to load symlinked $name into index ($type)" '
+ test_must_fail \
+ git -C $dir \
+ -c core.protectntfs \
+ -c core.protecthfs \
+ read-tree $tree 2>err &&
+ test_i18ngrep "invalid path.*$name" err &&
+ git -C $dir ls-files -s >out &&
+ test_must_be_empty out
+ '
+}
+
+check_dotx_symlink gitmodules vanilla .gitmodules
+check_dotx_symlink gitmodules ntfs ".gitmodules ."
+check_dotx_symlink gitmodules hfs ".${u200c}gitmodules"
test_expect_success 'fsck detects non-blob .gitmodules' '
git init non-blob &&
In t7450 we check that both verify_path() and fsck catch malformed .gitmodules entries in trees. However, we don't check that we catch filesystem-equivalent forms of these (e.g., ".GITMOD~1" on Windows). Our name-matching functions are exercised well in t0060, but there's nothing to test that we correctly call the matching functions from the actual fsck and verify_path() code. So instead of testing just .gitmodules, let's repeat our tests for a few basic cases. We don't need to be exhaustive here (t0060 handles that), but just make sure we hit one name of each type. Besides pushing the tests into a function that takes the path as a parameter, we'll need to do a few things: - adjust the directory name to accommodate the tests running multiple times - set core.protecthfs for index checks. Fsck always protects all types by default, but we want to be able to exercise the HFS routines on every system. Note that core.protectntfs is already the default these days, but it doesn't hurt to explicitly label our need for it. - we'll also take the filename ("gitmodules") as a parameter. All calls use the same name for now, but a future patch will extend this to handle other .gitfoo files. Note that our fake-content symlink destination is somewhat .gitmodules specific. But it isn't necessary for other files (which don't do a content check). And it happens to be a valid attribute and ignore file anyway. Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> --- t/t7450-bad-git-dotfiles.sh | 91 +++++++++++++++++++++---------------- 1 file changed, 53 insertions(+), 38 deletions(-)