* Git error message "Server does not allow request for unadvertised object" @ 2020-05-18 9:20 Yngve N. Pettersen 2020-05-25 12:27 ` Philippe Blain 2020-09-06 12:47 ` Yngve N. Pettersen 0 siblings, 2 replies; 4+ messages in thread From: Yngve N. Pettersen @ 2020-05-18 9:20 UTC (permalink / raw) To: git Hello all, A while back I reported an issue to the Windows Git project <https://github.com/git-for-windows/git/issues/2218> that I observed in Git for Windows 2.21. The error message "Server does not allow request for unadvertised object" is reported when a commit updating a submodule pointer points to a commit that does not exist in the repository for that submodule, even if later commits in the branch points to a commit that do exist in the submodule repo. This circumstance can easily occur if a developer (e.g) * interactively rebases a branch "foo" in the submodule (e.g to integrate commits from another branch before a larger rebase) * commits the resulting submodule pointer "A" in the branch to the parent repo * then do further rebasing in the submodule, e.g to move up on top of the "bar" branch * commits that pointer "B" to the parent repo * forgets to squash the history in the parent repo * pushes the updated submodule "foo" branch to the online repo. (NOTE: "B" is pushed, not "A") * pushes the parent module branch to its online repo When the parent repo is pulled by another developer, or an autobuild system, the fetch operation fails with the message "Server does not allow request for unadvertised object". A second fetch will complete successfully. IMO this kind of check should only happen if a commit with pointer to a missing submodule is actively checked out. At most the above message should be a warning, not a fatal error. For manual fetch operations this is mostly a nuisance, but for autobuilders this breaks the update operation, and the entire build operation fails. That is unacceptable behavior in an automatic system (errors if it breaks the checkout, yes; issues that are not relevant to the actual checkout, no). This issue prevents upgrading past 2.17 (since 2.18 and 2.19 had other blocking issues, and 2.20 apparently introduced this issue). I have not tested 2.22+ since I have not noticed any changelog messages that seem related. A test case can be found in issue 2218, linked above. For reference, we do have a server-side git hook that verifies that submodule pointers for the production branch is correct and exists in the submodule's repo, and also is on branches that follows certain naming conventions. As an aside, I think this kind of error message would be have been better suited as either a client-side push check, to prevent pushes of references to such missing commits (Smartgit seems to have something like it, but I think it only checks for the current branch in the submodule, not all submodule reference commits). Alternatively, there could be a check of this server-side. Related to this, but not as problematic, just irritating, and also seen in 2.17, is a message "warning: Submodule in commit deadbee at path: '(NULL)' collides with a submodule named the same. Skipping it." I think it is related to recreating a git modules file on a different branch. -- Sincerely, Yngve N. Pettersen Vivaldi Technologies AS ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
* Re: Git error message "Server does not allow request for unadvertised object" 2020-05-18 9:20 Git error message "Server does not allow request for unadvertised object" Yngve N. Pettersen @ 2020-05-25 12:27 ` Philippe Blain 2020-09-06 12:47 ` Yngve N. Pettersen 1 sibling, 0 replies; 4+ messages in thread From: Philippe Blain @ 2020-05-25 12:27 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Yngve N. Pettersen; +Cc: git Hello Yngve, > Le 18 mai 2020 à 05:20, Yngve N. Pettersen <yngve@vivaldi.com> a écrit : > > Hello all, > > A while back I reported an issue to the Windows Git project <https://github.com/git-for-windows/git/issues/2218> that I observed in Git for Windows 2.21. > > The error message "Server does not allow request for unadvertised object" is reported when a commit updating a submodule pointer points to a commit that does not exist in the repository for that submodule, even if later commits in the branch points to a commit that do exist in the submodule repo. > > This circumstance can easily occur if a developer (e.g) > > * interactively rebases a branch "foo" in the submodule (e.g to integrate commits from another branch before a larger rebase) > * commits the resulting submodule pointer "A" in the branch to the parent repo > * then do further rebasing in the submodule, e.g to move up on top of the "bar" branch > * commits that pointer "B" to the parent repo > * forgets to squash the history in the parent repo > * pushes the updated submodule "foo" branch to the online repo. (NOTE: "B" is pushed, not "A") > * pushes the parent module branch to its online repo > > When the parent repo is pulled by another developer, or an autobuild system, the fetch operation fails with the message "Server does not allow request for unadvertised object". A second fetch will complete successfully. > > IMO this kind of check should only happen if a commit with pointer to a missing submodule is actively checked out. At most the above message should be a warning, not a fatal error. I think that's a good idea. Another thing that I find confusing with this message is that it can be taken to mean that the server does not support fetching "unadvertised objects", i.e. `uploadpack.allow{Tip,Reachable,Any}SHA1InWant` is false, when in fact the object is simply inexistent... Philippe. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
* Re: Git error message "Server does not allow request for unadvertised object" 2020-05-18 9:20 Git error message "Server does not allow request for unadvertised object" Yngve N. Pettersen 2020-05-25 12:27 ` Philippe Blain @ 2020-09-06 12:47 ` Yngve N. Pettersen 2021-09-01 12:04 ` Yngve N. Pettersen 1 sibling, 1 reply; 4+ messages in thread From: Yngve N. Pettersen @ 2020-09-06 12:47 UTC (permalink / raw) To: git Hello again, I wondered what is happening about this issue? This continues to cause problems, especially now that Mac is using Git 2.21 (without AFAICT any way to revert to 2.17). The most recent case was last night, after a Work In Progress branch (that is, it was not used by any production code) in a submodule was pushed, but updates for at least one of the submodules wasn't pushed. Three different Mac autobuild jobs broke because of this error and had to be restarted. On Mon, 18 May 2020 11:20:57 +0200, Yngve N. Pettersen <yngve@vivaldi.com> wrote: > Hello all, > > A while back I reported an issue to the Windows Git project > <https://github.com/git-for-windows/git/issues/2218> that I observed in > Git for Windows 2.21. > > The error message "Server does not allow request for unadvertised > object" is reported when a commit updating a submodule pointer points to > a commit that does not exist in the repository for that submodule, even > if later commits in the branch points to a commit that do exist in the > submodule repo. > > This circumstance can easily occur if a developer (e.g) > > * interactively rebases a branch "foo" in the submodule (e.g to > integrate commits from another branch before a larger rebase) > * commits the resulting submodule pointer "A" in the branch to the > parent repo > * then do further rebasing in the submodule, e.g to move up on top of > the "bar" branch > * commits that pointer "B" to the parent repo > * forgets to squash the history in the parent repo > * pushes the updated submodule "foo" branch to the online repo. (NOTE: > "B" is pushed, not "A") > * pushes the parent module branch to its online repo > > When the parent repo is pulled by another developer, or an autobuild > system, the fetch operation fails with the message "Server does not > allow request for unadvertised object". A second fetch will complete > successfully. > > IMO this kind of check should only happen if a commit with pointer to a > missing submodule is actively checked out. At most the above message > should be a warning, not a fatal error. > > For manual fetch operations this is mostly a nuisance, but for > autobuilders this breaks the update operation, and the entire build > operation fails. That is unacceptable behavior in an automatic system > (errors if it breaks the checkout, yes; issues that are not relevant to > the actual checkout, no). > > This issue prevents upgrading past 2.17 (since 2.18 and 2.19 had other > blocking issues, and 2.20 apparently introduced this issue). I have not > tested 2.22+ since I have not noticed any changelog messages that seem > related. > > A test case can be found in issue 2218, linked above. > > For reference, we do have a server-side git hook that verifies that > submodule pointers for the production branch is correct and exists in > the submodule's repo, and also is on branches that follows certain > naming conventions. > > > As an aside, I think this kind of error message would be have been > better suited as either a client-side push check, to prevent pushes of > references to such missing commits (Smartgit seems to have something > like it, but I think it only checks for the current branch in the > submodule, not all submodule reference commits). Alternatively, there > could be a check of this server-side. > > > Related to this, but not as problematic, just irritating, and also seen > in 2.17, is a message "warning: Submodule in commit deadbee at path: > '(NULL)' collides with a submodule named the same. Skipping it." I think > it is related to recreating a git modules file on a different branch. > -- Sincerely, Yngve N. Pettersen Vivaldi Technologies AS ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
* Re: Git error message "Server does not allow request for unadvertised object" 2020-09-06 12:47 ` Yngve N. Pettersen @ 2021-09-01 12:04 ` Yngve N. Pettersen 0 siblings, 0 replies; 4+ messages in thread From: Yngve N. Pettersen @ 2021-09-01 12:04 UTC (permalink / raw) To: git Hello again, AFAICT I have not seen any updates about this problem since my previous email a year ago. From my side, I've just noticed a separate aspect of this issue. I have noticed a lot of failures related to a specific commit that was a unadvertised, and on one of the machines throwing this error, Git did report the repos and paths involved in triggering the error. In this case, the commit DO exists in the repo specified by gitmodules on the branch where the submodule commit is referenced. However, it does NOT exist in the repo referenced by the currently checked out branch! In more detail, for a currently checked out branch "foo", a submodule with URL "repo1.git" is specified for path "submodule/mysub" and commit "f0012345". On branch "bar" of this top repo, the "submodule/mysub" is specified with the URL "repo2.git", which is a fork of "repo1.git", and is specifying commit "ba598765", which does not exist in "repo1.git" When a fetch is done in the checkout of the "foo" branch, the new branch "bar" is fetched, and Git sees the submodule commit "ba598765" specified for "submodule/mysub", and decides to fetch it. However, it tries to fetch it from "repo1.git", NOT "repo2.git", which is what is specified for that path on the "bar" branch. The result is a fatal error for the fetch, causing the automatic build job to fail, even if the "ba598765" commit is not necessary for the current build job's checkout. I've also added a server-side git hook to validate the primary submodule's commit references, where most errors are likely to occur, but that is not able to prevent the kind of fetch failures described above, since the reference IS correct on the branch for which it is committed. As mentioned earlier, IMO this should not be a fatal error when fetching, at most it should be a warning. Additionally, as illustrated by the above example, when performing fetches for submodules the fetch operation should use the URL specified on the branch, not the one specified in the local checkout. On Sunday, 6 September, 2020 14:47:47 (+02:00), Yngve N. Pettersen wrote: > Hello again, > > I wondered what is happening about this issue? > > This continues to cause problems, especially now that Mac is using Git 2.21 (without AFAICT any way to revert to 2.17). > > The most recent case was last night, after a Work In Progress branch (that is, it was not used by any production code) in a submodule was pushed, but updates for at least one of the submodules wasn't pushed. Three different Mac autobuild jobs broke because of this error and had to be restarted. > > > On Mon, 18 May 2020 11:20:57 +0200, Yngve N. Pettersen <yngve@vivaldi.com> wrote: > > > Hello all, > > > > A while back I reported an issue to the Windows Git project <https://github.com/git-for-windows/git/issues/2218> that I observed in Git for Windows 2.21. > > > > The error message "Server does not allow request for unadvertised object" is reported when a commit updating a submodule pointer points to a commit that does not exist in the repository for that submodule, even if later commits in the branch points to a commit that do exist in the submodule repo. > > > > This circumstance can easily occur if a developer (e.g) > > > > * interactively rebases a branch "foo" in the submodule (e.g to integrate commits from another branch before a larger rebase) > > * commits the resulting submodule pointer "A" in the branch to the parent repo > > * then do further rebasing in the submodule, e.g to move up on top of the "bar" branch > > * commits that pointer "B" to the parent repo > > * forgets to squash the history in the parent repo > > * pushes the updated submodule "foo" branch to the online repo. (NOTE: "B" is pushed, not "A") > > * pushes the parent module branch to its online repo > > > > When the parent repo is pulled by another developer, or an autobuild system, the fetch operation fails with the message "Server does not allow request for unadvertised object". A second fetch will complete successfully. > > > > IMO this kind of check should only happen if a commit with pointer to a missing submodule is actively checked out. At most the above message should be a warning, not a fatal error. > > > > For manual fetch operations this is mostly a nuisance, but for autobuilders this breaks the update operation, and the entire build operation fails. That is unacceptable behavior in an automatic system (errors if it breaks the checkout, yes; issues that are not relevant to the actual checkout, no). > > > > This issue prevents upgrading past 2.17 (since 2.18 and 2.19 had other blocking issues, and 2.20 apparently introduced this issue). I have not tested 2.22+ since I have not noticed any changelog messages that seem related. > > > > A test case can be found in issue 2218, linked above. > > > > For reference, we do have a server-side git hook that verifies that submodule pointers for the production branch is correct and exists in the submodule's repo, and also is on branches that follows certain naming conventions. > > > > > > As an aside, I think this kind of error message would be have been better suited as either a client-side push check, to prevent pushes of references to such missing commits (Smartgit seems to have something like it, but I think it only checks for the current branch in the submodule, not all submodule reference commits). Alternatively, there could be a check of this server-side. > > > > > > Related to this, but not as problematic, just irritating, and also seen in 2.17, is a message "warning: Submodule in commit deadbee at path: '(NULL)' collides with a submodule named the same. Skipping it." I think it is related to recreating a git modules file on a different branch. > > > > -- Sincerely, Yngve N. Pettersen Vivaldi Technologies AS ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2021-09-01 12:13 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 4+ messages (download: mbox.gz / follow: Atom feed) -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2020-05-18 9:20 Git error message "Server does not allow request for unadvertised object" Yngve N. Pettersen 2020-05-25 12:27 ` Philippe Blain 2020-09-06 12:47 ` Yngve N. Pettersen 2021-09-01 12:04 ` Yngve N. Pettersen
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