Noticed by applying two diffs of different contexts to the same file.
The check for existence of a file was wrong: the test assumed it was
a directory and reset the errno (twice: directly and by calling
lstat). So if an entry existed and was _not_ a directory no attempt
was made to rename into it, because the errno (expected by renaming
code) was already reset to 0. This resulted in error:
fatal: unable to write file file mode 100644
For Linux, removing "errno = 0" is enough, as lstat wont modify errno
if it was successful. The behavior should not be depended upon,
though, so modify the "if" as well.
The test simulates this situation.
Signed-off-by: Alex Riesen <raa.lkml@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* used to be.
*/
struct stat st;
- errno = 0;
- if (!lstat(path, &st) && S_ISDIR(st.st_mode) && !rmdir(path))
+ if (!lstat(path, &st) && (!S_ISDIR(st.st_mode) || !rmdir(path)))
errno = EEXIST;
}
--- /dev/null
+#!/bin/sh
+
+test_description='git-apply for contextually independent diffs'
+. ./test-lib.sh
+
+echo '1
+2
+3
+4
+5
+6
+7
+8' >file
+
+test_expect_success 'setup' \
+ 'git add file &&
+ git commit -q -m 1 &&
+ git checkout -b test &&
+ mv file file.tmp &&
+ echo 0 >file &&
+ cat file.tmp >>file &&
+ rm file.tmp &&
+ git commit -a -q -m 2 &&
+ echo 9 >>file &&
+ git commit -a -q -m 3 &&
+ git checkout master'
+
+test_expect_success \
+ 'check if contextually independent diffs for the same file apply' \
+ '( git diff test~2 test~1; git diff test~1 test~0 )| git apply'
+
+test_done
+