This allows users to specify custom hashtags when uploading, both via
the CLI and via the same gitconfig settings as other upload options.
Bug: https://crbug.com/gerrit/11174
Change-Id: Ia0959e25b463e5f29d704e4d06e0de793d4fc77c
Reviewed-on: https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/c/git-repo/+/255855
Reviewed-by: David Pursehouse <dpursehouse@collab.net>
Tested-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@google.com>
If we're not in --verbose mode with repo sync, then omit the
per-project clone bundle progress bar.
Bug: https://crbug.com/gerrit/11293
Change-Id: Ibdf3be86d35fcbccbf6788c192189f38c577e6e9
Reviewed-on: https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/c/git-repo/+/255854
Tested-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@google.com>
Reviewed-by: David Pursehouse <dpursehouse@collab.net>
Trying to use booleans with names like "no_xxx" are hard to follow due
to the double negatives. Invert all of them so we only have positive
meanings to follow.
Change-Id: Ifd37d0368f97034d94aa2cf38db52c723ac0c6ed
Reviewed-on: https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/c/git-repo/+/255493
Tested-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@google.com>
Reviewed-by: David Pursehouse <dpursehouse@collab.net>
Syncing projects works fine the majority of the time. So rather than
dump all of that noisy output to stdout, lets capture it and only show
when things fail or in verbose mode. This tidies up the default `repo
sync` output.
Bug: https://crbug.com/gerrit/11293
Change-Id: I8314dd92e1e6aadeb26e36a8c92610da419684e6
Reviewed-on: https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/c/git-repo/+/255413
Reviewed-by: David Pursehouse <dpursehouse@collab.net>
Tested-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@google.com>
This allows us to control sync output better by having three levels
of output: quiet (only errors), default (progress bars), verbose (all
the things). For now, we just put the chatty "already have persistent
ref" message behind the verbose level.
Bug: https://crbug.com/gerrit/11293
Change-Id: Ia61333fd8085719f3e99edb7b466cdb04031b67f
Reviewed-on: https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/c/git-repo/+/255414
Reviewed-by: David Pursehouse <dpursehouse@collab.net>
Tested-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@google.com>
Our sync output is pretty chatty, and the stat output on fast forward
merges doesn't really help. Suppress it to tighten up the output.
Change-Id: I91e50639b3cd8db9df3d13a7da6d1aaa70d7932f
Reviewed-on: https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/c/git-repo/+/255412
Reviewed-by: David Pursehouse <dpursehouse@collab.net>
Tested-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@google.com>
All of the instances of this are related to Python 2 names that
don't exist in Python 3, and the warnings are raised when running
flake8 on Python 3.
All of these will go away once we completely remove support for
Python 2, so just suppress them inline. We don't globally suppress
the check so that we will still see legitimate errors if/when they
occur in new code.
Change-Id: Iccf955f50abfc9f83b371fc0af6cceb51037456f
Reviewed-on: https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/c/git-repo/+/255039
Tested-by: David Pursehouse <dpursehouse@collab.net>
Reviewed-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@google.com>
We've been requiring git-1.7.2 since Oct 2012, so we can safely drop
the individual checks sprinkled throughout the code base for older.
Change-Id: I1737fff7b3f27f475960b0bff9cb300aefd5d108
Reviewed-on: https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/c/git-repo/+/253135
Reviewed-by: David Pursehouse <dpursehouse@collab.net>
Tested-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@google.com>
flake8 reports:
E722 do not use bare 'except'
Replace them with 'except Exception' per [1] which says:
Bare except will catch exceptions you almost certainly don't want
to catch, including KeyboardInterrupt (the user hitting Ctrl+C) and
Python-raised errors like SystemExit
If you don't have a specific exception you're expecting, at least
except Exception, which is the base type for all "Regular" exceptions.
[1] https://stackoverflow.com/a/54948581
Change-Id: Ic555ea9482645899f5b04040ddb6b24eadbf9062
Reviewed-on: https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/c/git-repo/+/254606
Reviewed-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@google.com>
Tested-by: David Pursehouse <dpursehouse@collab.net>
- E301 expected 1 blank line
- E302 expected 2 blank lines
- E303 too many blank lines
- E305 expected 2 blank lines after class or function definition
- E306 expected 1 blank line before a nested definition
Fixed automatically with autopep8:
git ls-files | grep py$ | xargs autopep8 --in-place \
--select E301,E302,E303,E305,E306
Manually fix issues in project.py caused by misuse of block comments.
Change-Id: Iee840fcaff48aae504ddac9c3e76d2acd484f6a9
Reviewed-on: https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/c/git-repo/+/254599
Reviewed-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@google.com>
Tested-by: David Pursehouse <dpursehouse@collab.net>
- E121 continuation line under-indented for hanging indent
- E122 continuation line missing indentation or outdented
- E125 continuation line with same indent as next logical line
- E126 continuation line over-indented for hanging indent
- E127 continuation line over-indented for visual indent
- E128 continuation line under-indented for visual indent
- E129 visually indented line with same indent as next logical line
- E131 continuation line unaligned for hanging indent
Fixed automatically with autopep8:
git ls-files | grep py$ | xargs autopep8 --in-place \
--select E121,E122,E125,E126,E127,E128,E129,E131
Change-Id: Ifd95fb8e6a1a4d6e9de187b5787d64a6326dd249
Reviewed-on: https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/c/git-repo/+/254605
Reviewed-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@google.com>
Tested-by: David Pursehouse <dpursehouse@collab.net>
We have a few files that we optionally symlink from the work tree
.git/ to the .repo/projects/ path. If they don't exist when we
first initialize, then we skip creating symlinks. If the files
are created later on under the work tree .git/, repo gets upset.
This can happen with the packed-refs file: if we don't have any
packed refs initially, we don't symlink it. But if git tries to
pack refs later on and creates the file, the project gets wedged.
We could create an empty file initially and then symlink it, but
for some files, it's not clear we want to always do that (e.g.
the .git/shallow setting). Instead, lets make handling of these
paths more dynamic. If they show up later on in the work tree
.git/ only, we'll take care of relocating & symlinking. This
also makes repo a little more robust and autorecovers incase a
path goes missing in one of the dirs.
Ideally we wouldn't monkey around at all here, but considering
the only option we give to users currently is to blow things
away with --force-sync, this seems a bit better.
Bug: https://crbug.com/gerrit/12324
Change-Id: Ia6960f1896ac6d890c762d7d053684a1c6ab2c87
Reviewed-on: https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/c/git-repo/+/254632
Reviewed-by: David Pursehouse <dpursehouse@collab.net>
Tested-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@google.com>
This reverts commit 4abf8e6ef8.
The curl process for updating the cookie file is not atomic. When
fetching many bundles in parallel, we can sometimes corrupt the file
causing it to be cleared. Since users should manage gitcookies on
their own, leave it read-only.
Bug: https://crbug.com/gerrit/12300
Change-Id: Id472c99b197bc4cf8533c649f8881509f38643c1
Reviewed-on: https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/c/git-repo/+/254092
Reviewed-by: David Pursehouse <dpursehouse@collab.net>
Tested-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@google.com>
Since tempfile.mkstemp() returns a file handle in binary mode,
make sure we turn our strings into bytes before writing.
Bug: https://crbug.com/gerrit/12043
Change-Id: I3e84d595e84b8bc12a1fbc7fd0bb3ea0ba2832b0
Reviewed-on: https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/c/git-repo/+/254393
Reviewed-by: Michael Mortensen <mmortensen@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@google.com>
Tested-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@google.com>
Some Android/Nest manifests are using <linkfile> with src="." to
create stable paths to specific projects. Allow that specific
use case as it seems reasonable to support.
Bug: https://crbug.com/gerrit/11218
Change-Id: I16dbe8d9fe42ea45440afcb61404c753bff1930d
Reviewed-on: https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/c/git-repo/+/254330
Reviewed-by: Chanho Park <parkch98@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@google.com>
Tested-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@google.com>
Add a helper function to unify the duplication of finding the full
path to the symbolic HEAD ref. This makes it easy to handle git
worktrees where .git is a file rather than a dir/symlink.
Bug: https://crbug.com/gerrit/11486
Change-Id: I9f794f1295ad0d98c7c13622f01ded51e4ba7846
Reviewed-on: https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/c/git-repo/+/254074
Tested-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@google.com>
Reviewed-by: David Pursehouse <dpursehouse@collab.net>
These files are not directly executable, so drop the +x bits.
Change-Id: Iaf19a03a497686cc21103e7ddf08073173440dd1
Reviewed-on: https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/c/git-repo/+/254076
Tested-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@google.com>
Reviewed-by: David Pursehouse <dpursehouse@collab.net>
* Mirrors may contain multiple projects, some of which may not
always contain the default revision.
* Only fetch the default revision explicitly if
'--current-branch' is set.
* Fixes breakage casued by
commit 6856f98467
"Fix repo mirror with --current-branch"
Bug: https://crbug.com/gerrit/12274
Change-Id: Iaafabe2992f76f3644b841f24245d3e19c9515a9
Reviewed-on: https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/c/git-repo/+/253093
Reviewed-by: Kuang-che Wu <kcwu@chromium.org>
Reviewed-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@google.com>
Tested-by: Chirayu Desai <chirayudesai1@gmail.com>
Reject paths in <copyfile> & <linkfile> that try to use symlinks or
non-file or non-dirs.
We don't fully validate <linkfile> when src is a glob as it's a bit
complicated -- any component in the src could be the glob. We make
sure the destination is a directory, and that any paths in that dir
are created as symlinks. So while this can be used to read any path,
it can't be abused to write to any paths.
Bug: https://crbug.com/gerrit/11218
Change-Id: I68b6d789b5ca4e43f569e75e8b293b3e13d3224b
Reviewed-on: https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/c/git-repo/+/233074
Tested-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Michael Mortensen <mmortensen@google.com>
Before a2cd6aeae8, "repo mirror with --current-branch" fetches git data
using command
git fetch --progress --update-head-ok cros --tags
No refspec is specified, thus it fetches default refspec, which is +refs/heads/*:refs/heads/*
After a2cd6aeae8, the fetch command became
git fetch --progress --update-head-ok cros --tags +refs/tags/*:refs/tags/*
It did not only add tags refspec, but also suppressed the fetching of default refspec.
In other words, repo mirrors doesn't work if current_branch_only=True.
This CL explicitly adds the default refspec to command line if none is
specified.
Bug: https://crbug.com/gerrit/11990
Change-Id: Iadcf7b9aa50f53c47132cfe6c53b3fb2076ebca2
Reviewed-on: https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/c/git-repo/+/246632
Reviewed-by: David Pursehouse <dpursehouse@collab.net>
Reviewed-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@google.com>
Tested-by: Kuang-che Wu <kcwu@chromium.org>
Series of steps:
* Create a local "b1" branch with `repo start b1` that tracks a remote
branch (totally fine)
* Manually create a local "b2" branch with `git branch --track b1 b2`
that tracks the local "b1" (uh-oh...)
* Delete the local "b1" branch manually or via `repo prune` (....)
* Try to process the "b2" branch with `repo prune`
Since b2 tracks a branch that no longer exists, everything blows up
at this point as we try to probe the non-existent ref. Instead, we
should flag this as unknown and leave it up to the user to resolve.
This probably could come up if a local branch was tracking a remote
branch that was deleted from the server, and users ran something like
`repo sync --prune` which cleaned up the remote refs.
Bug: https://crbug.com/gerrit/11485
Change-Id: I6b6b6041943944b8efa6e2ad0b8b10f13a75a5c2
Reviewed-on: https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/c/git-repo/+/236793
Reviewed-by: David Pursehouse <dpursehouse@collab.net>
Reviewed-by: Kirtika Ruchandani <kirtika@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@google.com>
Tested-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@google.com>
If the local branch changed state since its last upload, the data
cached in .git/config related to the last uploaded CL might not be
that relevant. If we're able to fast forward merge to the latest
tree state, then let's do that. This would be akin to checking
out a detached head before syncing where we already switch state.
If we aren't able to fast forward merge, then it's not a big deal
as we'll continue on to the existing branch checking logic.
This would be easy to reproduce by doing something like:
$ repo start foo .
$ git revert HEAD
$ repo upload --cbr .
$ git reset --hard HEAD^
<CL is merged>
$ repo sync .
<we can fast forward>
Change-Id: I7d62f3d1ba5314a349d85b4dbb0ec8352eca18bb
Reviewed-on: https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/c/git-repo/+/238552
Tested-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Michael Mortensen <mmortensen@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@google.com>
If you run `repo sync -l foo` without first `repo sync -n foo`,
repo sets up an invalid gitdir tree that gets wedged and requires
manual recovery. Add a sanity check to abort cleanly first.
Change-Id: Iad865ea860a3f1fd2f39ce683fe66bd4380745a5
Reviewed-on: https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/c/git-repo/+/244732
Reviewed-by: David Pursehouse <dpursehouse@collab.net>
Tested-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@google.com>
Use open() as a context manager to simplify the close logic and make
the code easier to read & understand. This is also more Pythonic.
Change-Id: I579d03cca86f99b2c6c6a1f557f6e5704e2515a7
Reviewed-on: https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/c/git-repo/+/244734
Reviewed-by: David Pursehouse <dpursehouse@collab.net>
Tested-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@google.com>
Hitting Ctrl-C in the middle of this func will leave the .git in a
bad state that requires manual recovery. The code tries to catch
all exceptions and recover by deleting the incomplete .git dir, but
it omits KeyboardInterrupt which Exception misses.
We could add that to the recovery path, but we can make this more
robust with a different approach: set up everything in .git.tmp/
and only move it to .git/ once we've fully initialized it.
Change-Id: I0f5b97f2e19fc39cffc3e5e23993a2da7220f4e3
Reviewed-on: https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/c/git-repo/+/244733
Reviewed-by: David Pursehouse <dpursehouse@collab.net>
Tested-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@google.com>
If the repo client checkout is in an incomplete sync state, the work
git repo might be in a bad way. Turn errors parsing HEAD into None
since callers of CurrentBranch already need to account for it.
Change-Id: Ia7682e29ef4182006b1fb5f5e57800f8ab67a9f4
Reviewed-on: https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/c/git-repo/+/239239
Reviewed-by: David Pursehouse <dpursehouse@collab.net>
Tested-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@google.com>
If `git diff` fails in any project checkout (e.g. an incomplete
sync), make sure we print that error clearly rather than blowing
up, and exit non-zero in the process.
Bug: https://crbug.com/gerrit/11613
Change-Id: I12f278427cced20f23f8047e7e3dba8f442ee25e
Reviewed-on: https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/c/git-repo/+/239236
Reviewed-by: David Pursehouse <dpursehouse@collab.net>
Tested-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@google.com>
When displaying progress bars, we use \r to reset the cursor to the
start of the line before showing the new update. This assumes the
new line will fully erase whatever was displayed there previously.
The "done" codepath tries to handle this by including a few extra
spaces at the end of the message to "white out" what was there.
Lets replace that hack with the standard ECMA escape sequence that
clears the current line completely. This is the CSI "erase in line"
sequence that the terminal will use to delete all content. The \r
is still needed to move the cursor to the start of the line. Using
this sequence should be OK since we're already assuming the terminal
is ECMA compliant with our use of coloring sequences. We also put
the \r after the CSI sequence on the off chance the terminal can't
process it and displays a few bytes of garbage.
The other improvement is to the syncbuffer API. When it dumps its
status information, it almost always comes after a progress bar
update which leads to confusing comingled output. Something like:
Fetching projects: 100% (2/2) error: src/platform2/: branch ...
Since the progress bar is "throw away", have the syncbuffer reset
the current output to the start of the line before showing whatever
messages it has queued.
Bug: https://crbug.com/gerrit/11293
Change-Id: I6544d073fe993d98ee7e91fca5e501ba5fecfe4c
Reviewed-on: https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/c/git-repo/+/236615
Reviewed-by: David Pursehouse <dpursehouse@collab.net>
Tested-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@google.com>
This makes it way easier to recover from forgetting to run repo start
before committing: just run `repo start -b new-branch`, instead of
all that tedious mucking around with reflogs.
Change-Id: I56d49dce5d027e28fbba0507ac10cd763ccfc36d
Reviewed-on: https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/c/git-repo/+/232712
Reviewed-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@google.com>
Reviewed-by: David Pursehouse <dpursehouse@collab.net>
Tested-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@google.com>
There is a standard Python "trace" module, so having a local trace.py
prevents us being able to import that. Rename the module to avoid.
Change-Id: I23e29ec95a2204bb168a641323d05e76968d9b57
Reviewed-on: https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/c/git-repo/+/234832
Reviewed-by: David Pursehouse <dpursehouse@collab.net>
Tested-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@google.com>
The GitCommand Wait helper takes care of decoding bytes to strings
for us. That means we don't have to decode stdout ourselves which
is what our local rev list, ls-remote, and generic get_attr helpers
were doing.
If we don't use Wait though to capture the output but instead go
directly to the subprocess stdout, we do have to handle decoding
ourselves. This is what the diff helpers were doing.
Bug: https://crbug.com/gerrit/10418
Change-Id: I057ca245af3ff18d6b4a074e3900887f06a5617d
Reviewed-on: https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/c/git-repo/+/233076
Reviewed-by: David Pursehouse <dpursehouse@collab.net>
Tested-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@google.com>
As we convert repo to support Python 3, the version of Python that we
use might not be the version that repo hooks users have written for.
Since repo upgrades are not immediate, and not easily under direct
control of end users (relative to the projects maintaining the hook
code), allow hook authors to declare the version of Python that they
want to use.
Now repo will read the shebang from the hook script and compare it
against the version of Python repo itself is running under. If they
differ, we'll try to execute a separate instance of Python and have
it load & execute the hook. If things are compatible, then we still
use the inprocess execution logic that we have today.
This allows repo hook users to upgrade on their own schedule (they
could even upgrade to Python 3 ahead of us) without having to worry
about their supported version being exactly in sync with repo's.
Bug: https://crbug.com/gerrit/10418
Change-Id: I97c7c96b64fb2ee465c39b90e9bdcc76394a146a
Reviewed-on: https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/c/git-repo/+/228432
Reviewed-by: David Pursehouse <dpursehouse@collab.net>
Tested-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@google.com>
A new option, --partial-clone is added to 'repo init' which tells repo
to utilize git's partial clone functionality, which reduces disk and
bandwidth usage when downloading by omitting blob downloads initially.
Different from restricting clone-depth, the user will have full access
to change history, etc., as the objects are downloaded on demand.
Change-Id: I60326744875eac16521a007bd7d5481112a98749
Reviewed-on: https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/c/git-repo/+/229532
Reviewed-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@google.com>
Tested-by: Xin Li <delphij@google.com>
This fix exception with python3 with stack-trace:
error: Cannot fetch platform_external_grpc-grpc-java.git (UnicodeDecodeError: 'utf-8' codec can't decode byte 0x96 in position 640: invalid start byte)
[...]
File "[...]project.py", line 2255, in _IsValidBundle
if f.read(16) == '# v2 git bundle\n':
File "/usr/lib/python3.5/codecs.py", line 321, in decode
(result, consumed) = self._buffer_decode(data, self.errors, final)
Even if we ask 16 characters, python buffered decoder will try to decode more in the buffer
The patch works for python2 and python3, and open the file in byte mode so that decoding is not attemped
Signed-off-by: Pierre Tardy <tardyp@gmail.com>
Change-Id: I837ae3c5cd724b34670fc2a84e853431f482b20d
Reviewed-on: https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/c/git-repo/+/224642
Reviewed-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@google.com>
Reviewed-by: David Pursehouse <dpursehouse@collab.net>
Tested-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@google.com>
Currently we read the binary stream from the subprocess code directly
before waiting for it to finish, but there's no need to do so as we
aren't streaming the output to the user. This also means we pass up
binary data to the caller as we don't go through GitCommand's internal
logic which decodes the stream as utf-8.
Simplify the code by calling Wait first, then splitting the entire
captured output in one line.
Bug: https://crbug.com/gerrit/10418
Change-Id: I7a57904be8cb546a229980fb79c829fc3df31e7d
There's no reason to support any other encoding in these files.
This only affects the files themselves and not streams they open.
Bug: https://crbug.com/gerrit/10418
Change-Id: I053cb40cd3666ce5c8a0689b9dd938f24ca765bf
During sync, repo runs `git read-tree --reset -u -v HEAD` which causes
git-lfs's smudge filter to run, which fails because git-lfs does not
work with bare repositories.
This was fixed in I091ff37998131e2e6bbc59aa37ee352fe12d7fcd to
automatically disable this smudge filter. However, later versions of
Git (2.11.0) introduced a new filter protocol [1], to avoid spawning
a new command for each filtered file. This was implemented in Git-LFS
1.5.0 [2].
This patch fixes the issue by setting the git lfs process filter, in
addition to the smudge filter. For any projects that have LFS objects,
`git lfs pull` must still be executed manually afterwards.
[1] edcc85814c
[2] https://github.com/git-lfs/git-lfs/pull/1617
Bug: https://crbug.com/gerrit/10911
Change-Id: I277fc68fdefc91514a2412b3887e3be9106cab48
When syncing a lot of projects in parallel, it is not otherwise
clear which one of them has failed to init work tree.
Change-Id: I8edfb4955023389a499e99cfa511bdc0d2850ba2
This allows projects to include submodules inside of
projects that use repo without repo incorrectly believing
the area is dirty just because a submodule has updates.
This is in line with git porcelain commands which generally
require a commandline flag to include submodules (git add,
git rebase).
Change-Id: Ide8a292162a42ab35145b5c4ca8ca0d020cdfe81
The newly introduced "Already have persistent ref" message prevents
repo from overwriting the last line when syncing quietly. Omit the
message when syncing quietly to clean up the output and to restore
the previous behaviour.
Change-Id: Idf42751c67f95924d6de50092ba54d4c6fe93096
If a tag is rewritten on the server (which is bad), trying to recover
locally with `repo sync --force-sync` doesn't actually work. People
have to manually delete things themselves to fix syncing. While tags
should never be rewritten in practice, allow users to easily recover
from broken servers.
We updated some of these code paths already (see commit 6e53844f1e
"Allow clobbering of existing tags from remote."), but the incremental
update flow was missed.
Bug: b/120778183
Bug: chromium:932651
Test: delete local tag & recreate to diff commit, then check
`repo sync` & `repo sync --force-sync` behavior
Change-Id: I3648f7d2526732c06016b691a9a36c003157618d
Even if dots are used as separators for Git config keys, they are not
forbidden as part of submodule names. This fixes the issue of submodules
with a name like e.g. "long.js" to be skipped from checkout.
Change-Id: I77da07925ad207fa3d043067dfbbcb4a1ebdac4d