Turns out we didn't have tests for some of the important behavior introduced
for flake reference fragments and url queries [1]. This is rather important
and is relied upon by existing tooling. This fixes up these exact cases before
handing off the URL to the Boost.URL parser.
To the best of my knowledge this implements the same behavior as prior regex-based
parser did [2]:
> fragmentRegex = "(?:" + pcharRegex + "|[/? \"^])*";
> queryRegex = "(?:" + pcharRegex + "|[/? \"])*";
[1]: 9c0a09f09f
[2]: https://github.com/NixOS/nix/blob/2.30.2/src/libutil/include/nix/util/url-parts.hh
Fixes usage of `#` symbol in the reference name.
This also seems to identify several deficiencies in the libgit2 refname
validation code wrt to DEL symbol and a singular `@` symbol [1].
[1]: https://git-scm.com/docs/git-check-ref-format#_description
* It is tough to contribute to a project that doesn't use a formatter,
* It is extra hard to contribute to a project which has configured the formatter, but ignores it for some files
* Code formatting makes it harder to hide obscure / weird bugs by accident or on purpose,
Let's rip the bandaid off?
Note that PRs currently in flight should be able to be merged relatively easily by applying `clang-format` to their tip prior to merge.
For example, instead of doing
#include "nix/store-config.hh"
#include "nix/derived-path.hh"
Now do
#include "nix/store/config.hh"
#include "nix/store/derived-path.hh"
This was originally planned in the issue, and also recent requested by
Eelco.
Most of the change is purely mechanical. There is just one small
additional issue. See how, in the example above, we took this
opportunity to also turn `<comp>-config.hh` into `<comp>/config.hh`.
Well, there was already a `nix/util/config.{cc,hh}`. Even though there
is not a public configuration header for libutil (which also would be
called `nix/util/config.{cc,hh}`) that's still confusing, To avoid any
such confusion, we renamed that to `nix/util/configuration.{cc,hh}`.
Finally, note that the libflake headers already did this, so we didn't
need to do anything to them. We wouldn't want to mistakenly get
`nix/flake/flake/flake.hh`!
Progress on #7876
The short answer for why we need to do this is so we can consistently do
`#include "nix/..."`. Without this change, there are ways to still make
that work, but they are hacky, and they have downsides such as making it
harder to make sure headers from the wrong Nix library (e..g.
`libnixexpr` headers in `libnixutil`) aren't being used.
The C API alraedy used `nix_api_*`, so its headers are *not* put in
subdirectories accordingly.
Progress on #7876
We resisted doing this for a while because it would be annoying to not
have the header source file pairs close by / easy to change file
path/name from one to the other. But I am ameliorating that with
symlinks in the next commit.