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authorTao Klerks <tao@klerks.biz>2022-04-29 12:56:45 +0300
committerJunio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>2022-04-29 21:20:55 +0300
commit8a649be7e8010085a8a3f1c9126da5c02324350e (patch)
treeee31880869adbf2497d38ffe263340bd7a9833fd /t/t5528-push-default.sh
parentbdaf1dfae71fdf120fc7253e713ccf0a06cc5558 (diff)
push: default to single remote even when not named origin
With "push.default=current" configured, a simple "git push" will push to the same-name branch on the current branch's branch.<name>.pushRemote, or remote.pushDefault, or origin. If none of these are defined, the push will fail with error "fatal: No configured push destination". The same "default to origin if no config" behavior applies with "push.default=matching". Other commands use "origin" as a default when there are multiple options, but default to the single remote when there is only one - for example, "git checkout <something>". This "assume the single remote if there is only one" behavior is more friendly/useful than a defaulting behavior that only uses the name "origin" no matter what. Update "git push" to also default to the single remote (and finally fall back to "origin" as default if there are several), for "push.default=current" and for other current and future remote-defaulting push behaviors. This change also modifies the behavior of ls-remote in a consistent way, so defaulting not only supplies 'origin', but any single configured remote also. Document the change in behavior, correct incorrect assumptions in related tests, and add test cases reflecting this new single-remote-defaulting behavior. Signed-off-by: Tao Klerks <tao@klerks.biz> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Diffstat (limited to 't/t5528-push-default.sh')
-rwxr-xr-xt/t5528-push-default.sh63
1 files changed, 62 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/t/t5528-push-default.sh b/t/t5528-push-default.sh
index f280e00eb7..0d6c9869ed 100755
--- a/t/t5528-push-default.sh
+++ b/t/t5528-push-default.sh
@@ -94,13 +94,74 @@ test_expect_success '"upstream" does not push when remotes do not match' '
test_must_fail git push parent2
'
-test_expect_success 'push from/to new branch with upstream, matching and simple' '
+test_expect_success '"current" does not push when multiple remotes and none origin' '
+ git checkout main &&
+ test_config push.default current &&
+ test_commit current-multi &&
+ test_must_fail git push
+'
+
+test_expect_success '"current" pushes when remote explicitly specified' '
+ git checkout main &&
+ test_config push.default current &&
+ test_commit current-specified &&
+ git push parent1
+'
+
+test_expect_success '"current" pushes to origin when no remote specified among multiple' '
+ git checkout main &&
+ test_config remote.origin.url repo1 &&
+ test_config remote.origin.fetch "+refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/*" &&
+ test_commit current-origin &&
+ test_push_success current main
+'
+
+test_expect_success '"current" pushes to single remote even when not specified' '
+ git checkout main &&
+ test_when_finished git remote add parent1 repo1 &&
+ git remote remove parent1 &&
+ test_commit current-implied &&
+ test_push_success current main repo2
+'
+
+test_expect_success 'push from/to new branch with non-defaulted remote fails with upstream, matching, current and simple ' '
git checkout -b new-branch &&
test_push_failure simple &&
test_push_failure matching &&
+ test_push_failure upstream &&
+ test_push_failure current
+'
+
+test_expect_success 'push from/to new branch fails with upstream and simple ' '
+ git checkout -b new-branch-1 &&
+ test_config branch.new-branch-1.remote parent1 &&
+ test_push_failure simple &&
test_push_failure upstream
'
+# The behavior here is surprising but not entirely wrong:
+# - the current branch is used to determine the target remote
+# - the "matching" push default pushes matching branches, *ignoring* the
+# current new branch as it does not have upstream tracking
+# - the default push succeeds
+#
+# A previous test expected this to fail, but for the wrong reasons:
+# it expected a fail becaause the branch is new and cannot be pushed, but
+# in fact it was failing because of an ambiguous remote
+#
+test_expect_failure 'push from/to new branch fails with matching ' '
+ git checkout -b new-branch-2 &&
+ test_config branch.new-branch-2.remote parent1 &&
+ test_push_failure matching
+'
+
+test_expect_success 'push from/to branch with tracking fails with nothing ' '
+ git checkout -b tracked-branch &&
+ test_config branch.tracked-branch.remote parent1 &&
+ test_config branch.tracked-branch.merge refs/heads/tracked-branch &&
+ test_push_failure nothing
+'
+
test_expect_success '"matching" fails if none match' '
git init --bare empty &&
test_must_fail git push empty : 2>actual &&