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* factor out Utility.FileSystemEncodingGravatar Joey Hess2012-03-09
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* Merge branch 'master' into ghc7.4Gravatar Joey Hess2012-02-03
|\ | | | | | | | | Conflicts: Utility/Misc.hs
| * IO exception reworkGravatar Joey Hess2012-02-03
| | | | | | | | | | | | ghc 7.4 comaplains about use of System.IO.Error to catch exceptions. Ok, use Control.Exception, with variants specialized to only catch IO exceptions.
* | support all filename encodings with ghc 7.4Gravatar Joey Hess2012-02-03
|/ | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Under ghc 7.4, this seems to be able to handle all filename encodings again. Including filename encodings that do not match the LANG setting. I think this will not work with earlier versions of ghc, it uses some ghc internals. Turns out that ghc 7.4 has a special filesystem encoding that it uses when reading/writing filenames (as FilePaths). This encoding is documented to allow "arbitrary undecodable bytes to be round-tripped through it". So, to get FilePaths from eg, git ls-files, set the Handle that is reading from git to use this encoding. Then things basically just work. However, I have not found a way to make Text read using this encoding. Text really does assume unicode. So I had to switch back to using String when reading/writing data to git. Which is a pity, because it's some percent slower, but at least it works. Note that stdout and stderr also have to be set to this encoding, or printing out filenames that contain undecodable bytes causes a crash. IMHO this is a misfeature in ghc, that the user can pass you a filename, which you can readFile, etc, but that default, putStr of filename may cause a crash! Git.CheckAttr gave me special trouble, because the filenames I got back from git, after feeding them in, had further encoding breakage. Rather than try to deal with that, I just zip up the input filenames with the attributes. Which must be returned in the same order queried for this to work. Also of note is an apparent GHC bug I worked around in Git.CheckAttr. It used to forkProcess and feed git from the child process. Unfortunatly, after this forkProcess, accessing the `files` variable from the parent returns []. Not the value that was passed into the function. This screams of a bad bug, that's clobbering a variable, but for now I just avoid forkProcess there to work around it. That forkProcess was itself only added because of a ghc bug, #624389. I've confirmed that the test case for that bug doesn't reproduce it with ghc 7.4. So that's ok, except for the new ghc bug I have not isolated and reported. Why does this simple bit of code magnet the ghc bugs? :) Also, the symlink touching code is currently broken, when used on utf-8 filenames in a non-utf-8 locale, or probably on any filename containing undecodable bytes, and I temporarily commented it out.
* typoGravatar Joey Hess2012-01-20
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* moveGravatar Joey Hess2011-12-15
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* cleanupGravatar Joey Hess2011-12-12
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* some work on avoiding partial functionsGravatar Joey Hess2011-12-09
| | | | | There are still hundreds of places that use partial functions head, tail, init, and last.
* factored out some useful error catching methodsGravatar Joey Hess2011-11-10
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* indentGravatar Joey Hess2011-11-07
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* playing with >=>Gravatar Joey Hess2011-10-31
| | | | | Apparently in haskell if you teach a man to fish, he'll write more pointfree code.
* broke up UtilityGravatar Joey Hess2011-10-16