diff options
author | Russell Belfer <rb@github.com> | 2013-02-15 15:58:13 -0800 |
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committer | Russell Belfer <rb@github.com> | 2013-02-15 15:58:13 -0800 |
commit | a7ed746093f42fd61f38a0a9ea5ef73c45f11efa (patch) | |
tree | 38a154c8090eb46296b07859bcd6e8ab1830f3ce /examples/general.c | |
parent | 1d75acf7b7d9b5fd17c6d8ae62e4092f02315582 (diff) | |
download | libgit2-a7ed746093f42fd61f38a0a9ea5ef73c45f11efa.tar.gz |
Add rudimentary error checks and reformat comments
There were a number of functions assigning their return value to
`error` without much explanation. I added in some rudimentary
error checking to help flesh out the example.
Also, I reformatted all of the comments down to 80 cols (and in
some cases, slightly updated the wording).
Diffstat (limited to 'examples/general.c')
-rw-r--r-- | examples/general.c | 353 |
1 files changed, 207 insertions, 146 deletions
diff --git a/examples/general.c b/examples/general.c index a042be011..c7853fa62 100644 --- a/examples/general.c +++ b/examples/general.c @@ -1,19 +1,20 @@ -// [**libgit2**][lg] is a portable, pure C implementation of the Git core methods -// provided as a re-entrant linkable library with a solid API, allowing you -// to write native speed custom Git applications in any language which -// supports C bindings. +// [**libgit2**][lg] is a portable, pure C implementation of the Git core +// methods provided as a re-entrant linkable library with a solid API, +// allowing you to write native speed custom Git applications in any +// language which supports C bindings. // // This file is an example of using that API in a real, compilable C file. -// As the API is updated, this file will be updated to demonstrate the -// new functionality. +// As the API is updated, this file will be updated to demonstrate the new +// functionality. // -// If you're trying to write something in C using [libgit2][lg], you will also want -// to check out the generated [API documentation][ap]. We've -// tried to link to the relevant sections of the API docs in each section in this file. +// If you're trying to write something in C using [libgit2][lg], you should +// also check out the generated [API documentation][ap]. We try to link to +// the relevant sections of the API docs in each section in this file. // -// **libgit2** only implements the core plumbing functions, not really the higher -// level porcelain stuff. For a primer on Git Internals that you will need to know -// to work with Git at this level, check out [Chapter 9][pg] of the Pro Git book. +// **libgit2** (for the most part) only implements the core plumbing +// functions, not really the higher level porcelain stuff. For a primer on +// Git Internals that you will need to know to work with Git at this level, +// check out [Chapter 9][pg] of the Pro Git book. // // [lg]: http://libgit2.github.com // [ap]: http://libgit2.github.com/libgit2 @@ -21,43 +22,63 @@ // ### Includes -// Including the `git2.h` header will include all the other libgit2 headers that you need. -// It should be the only thing you need to include in order to compile properly and get -// all the libgit2 API. +// Including the `git2.h` header will include all the other libgit2 headers +// that you need. It should be the only thing you need to include in order +// to compile properly and get all the libgit2 API. #include <git2.h> #include <stdio.h> +// Almost all libgit2 functions return 0 on success or negative on error. +// This is not production quality error checking, but should be sufficient +// as an example. +static void check_error(int error_code, const char *action) +{ + if (!error_code) + return; + + const git_error *error = giterr_last(); + + printf("Error %d %s - %s\n", error_code, action, + (error && error->message) ? error->message : "???"); + + exit(1); +} + int main (int argc, char** argv) { // ### Opening the Repository - // There are a couple of methods for opening a repository, this being the simplest. - // There are also [methods][me] for specifying the index file and work tree locations, here - // we are assuming they are in the normal places. + // There are a couple of methods for opening a repository, this being the + // simplest. There are also [methods][me] for specifying the index file + // and work tree locations, here we assume they are in the normal places. // // [me]: http://libgit2.github.com/libgit2/#HEAD/group/repository + int error; + const char *repo_path = (argc > 1) ? argv[1] : "/opt/libgit2-test/.git"; git_repository *repo; - if (argc > 1) { - git_repository_open(&repo, argv[1]); - } else { - git_repository_open(&repo, "/opt/libgit2-test/.git"); - } + + error = git_repository_open(&repo, repo_path); + check_error(error, "opening repository"); // ### SHA-1 Value Conversions - // For our first example, we will convert a 40 character hex value to the 20 byte raw SHA1 value. + // For our first example, we will convert a 40 character hex value to the + // 20 byte raw SHA1 value. printf("*Hex to Raw*\n"); char hex[] = "fd6e612585290339ea8bf39c692a7ff6a29cb7c3"; - // The `git_oid` is the structure that keeps the SHA value. We will use this throughout the example - // for storing the value of the current SHA key we're working with. + // The `git_oid` is the structure that keeps the SHA value. We will use + // this throughout the example for storing the value of the current SHA + // key we're working with. git_oid oid; git_oid_fromstr(&oid, hex); - // Once we've converted the string into the oid value, we can get the raw value of the SHA. + // Once we've converted the string into the oid value, we can get the raw + // value of the SHA. printf("Raw 20 bytes: [%.20s]\n", (&oid)->id); - // Next we will convert the 20 byte raw SHA1 value to a human readable 40 char hex value. + // Next we will convert the 20 byte raw SHA1 value to a human readable 40 + // char hex value. printf("\n*Raw to Hex*\n"); char out[41]; out[40] = '\0'; @@ -67,10 +88,12 @@ int main (int argc, char** argv) printf("SHA hex string: %s\n", out); // ### Working with the Object Database - // **libgit2** provides [direct access][odb] to the object database. - // The object database is where the actual objects are stored in Git. For + + // **libgit2** provides [direct access][odb] to the object database. The + // object database is where the actual objects are stored in Git. For // working with raw objects, we'll need to get this structure from the // repository. + // // [odb]: http://libgit2.github.com/libgit2/#HEAD/group/odb git_odb *odb; git_repository_odb(&odb, repo); @@ -82,55 +105,60 @@ int main (int argc, char** argv) git_otype otype; const unsigned char *data; const char *str_type; - int error; - // We can read raw objects directly from the object database if we have the oid (SHA) - // of the object. This allows us to access objects without knowing thier type and inspect - // the raw bytes unparsed. + // We can read raw objects directly from the object database if we have + // the oid (SHA) of the object. This allows us to access objects without + // knowing thier type and inspect the raw bytes unparsed. error = git_odb_read(&obj, odb, &oid); - - // A raw object only has three properties - the type (commit, blob, tree or tag), the size - // of the raw data and the raw, unparsed data itself. For a commit or tag, that raw data - // is human readable plain ASCII text. For a blob it is just file contents, so it could be - // text or binary data. For a tree it is a special binary format, so it's unlikely to be - // hugely helpful as a raw object. + check_error(error, "finding object in repository"); + + // A raw object only has three properties - the type (commit, blob, tree + // or tag), the size of the raw data and the raw, unparsed data itself. + // For a commit or tag, that raw data is human readable plain ASCII + // text. For a blob it is just file contents, so it could be text or + // binary data. For a tree it is a special binary format, so it's unlikely + // to be hugely helpful as a raw object. data = (const unsigned char *)git_odb_object_data(obj); otype = git_odb_object_type(obj); - // We provide methods to convert from the object type which is an enum, to a string - // representation of that value (and vice-versa). + // We provide methods to convert from the object type which is an enum, to + // a string representation of that value (and vice-versa). str_type = git_object_type2string(otype); printf("object length and type: %d, %s\n", (int)git_odb_object_size(obj), str_type); - // For proper memory management, close the object when you are done with it or it will leak - // memory. + // For proper memory management, close the object when you are done with + // it or it will leak memory. git_odb_object_free(obj); // #### Raw Object Writing printf("\n*Raw Object Write*\n"); - // You can also write raw object data to Git. This is pretty cool because it gives you - // direct access to the key/value properties of Git. Here we'll write a new blob object - // that just contains a simple string. Notice that we have to specify the object type as - // the `git_otype` enum. + // You can also write raw object data to Git. This is pretty cool because + // it gives you direct access to the key/value properties of Git. Here + // we'll write a new blob object that just contains a simple string. + // Notice that we have to specify the object type as the `git_otype` enum. git_odb_write(&oid, odb, "test data", sizeof("test data") - 1, GIT_OBJ_BLOB); - // Now that we've written the object, we can check out what SHA1 was generated when the - // object was written to our database. + // Now that we've written the object, we can check out what SHA1 was + // generated when the object was written to our database. git_oid_fmt(out, &oid); printf("Written Object: %s\n", out); // ### Object Parsing - // libgit2 has methods to parse every object type in Git so you don't have to work directly - // with the raw data. This is much faster and simpler than trying to deal with the raw data - // yourself. + + // libgit2 has methods to parse every object type in Git so you don't have + // to work directly with the raw data. This is much faster and simpler + // than trying to deal with the raw data yourself. // #### Commit Parsing - // [Parsing commit objects][pco] is simple and gives you access to all the data in the commit - // - the // author (name, email, datetime), committer (same), tree, message, encoding and parent(s). + + // [Parsing commit objects][pco] is simple and gives you access to all the + // data in the commit - the author (name, email, datetime), committer + // (same), tree, message, encoding and parent(s). + // // [pco]: http://libgit2.github.com/libgit2/#HEAD/group/commit printf("\n*Commit Parsing*\n"); @@ -139,27 +167,31 @@ int main (int argc, char** argv) git_oid_fromstr(&oid, "f0877d0b841d75172ec404fc9370173dfffc20d1"); error = git_commit_lookup(&commit, repo, &oid); + check_error(error, "looking up commit"); const git_signature *author, *cmtter; const char *message; time_t ctime; unsigned int parents, p; - // Each of the properties of the commit object are accessible via methods, including commonly - // needed variations, such as `git_commit_time` which returns the author time and `_message` - // which gives you the commit message. + // Each of the properties of the commit object are accessible via methods, + // including commonly needed variations, such as `git_commit_time` which + // returns the author time and `git_commit_message` which gives you the + // commit message (as a NUL-terminated string). message = git_commit_message(commit); author = git_commit_author(commit); cmtter = git_commit_committer(commit); ctime = git_commit_time(commit); - // The author and committer methods return [git_signature] structures, which give you name, email - // and `when`, which is a `git_time` structure, giving you a timestamp and timezone offset. + // The author and committer methods return [git_signature] structures, + // which give you name, email and `when`, which is a `git_time` structure, + // giving you a timestamp and timezone offset. printf("Author: %s (%s)\n", author->name, author->email); - // Commits can have zero or more parents. The first (root) commit will have no parents, most commits - // will have one, which is the commit it was based on, and merge commits will have two or more. - // Commits can technically have any number, though it's pretty rare to have more than two. + // Commits can have zero or more parents. The first (root) commit will + // have no parents, most commits will have one (i.e. the commit it was + // based on) and merge commits will have two or more. Commits can + // technically have any number, though it's rare to have more than two. parents = git_commit_parentcount(commit); for (p = 0;p < parents;p++) { git_commit *parent; @@ -169,15 +201,17 @@ int main (int argc, char** argv) git_commit_free(parent); } - // Don't forget to close the object to prevent memory leaks. You will have to do this for - // all the objects you open and parse. + // Don't forget to close the object to prevent memory leaks. You will have + // to do this for all the objects you open and parse. git_commit_free(commit); // #### Writing Commits + + // libgit2 provides a couple of methods to create commit objects easily as + // well. There are four different create signatures, we'll just show one + // of them here. You can read about the other ones in the [commit API + // docs][cd]. // - // libgit2 provides a couple of methods to create commit objects easily as well. There are four - // different create signatures, we'll just show one of them here. You can read about the other - // ones in the [commit API docs][cd]. // [cd]: http://libgit2.github.com/libgit2/#HEAD/group/commit printf("\n*Commit Writing*\n"); @@ -185,24 +219,27 @@ int main (int argc, char** argv) git_tree *tree; git_commit *parent; - // Creating signatures for an authoring identity and time is pretty simple - you will need to have - // this to create a commit in order to specify who created it and when. Default values for the name - // and email should be found in the `user.name` and `user.email` configuration options. See the `config` - // section of this example file to see how to access config values. - git_signature_new((git_signature **)&author, "Scott Chacon", "schacon@gmail.com", - 123456789, 60); - git_signature_new((git_signature **)&cmtter, "Scott A Chacon", "scott@github.com", - 987654321, 90); - - // Commit objects need a tree to point to and optionally one or more parents. Here we're creating oid - // objects to create the commit with, but you can also use + // Creating signatures for an authoring identity and time is simple. You + // will need to do this to specify who created a commit and when. Default + // values for the name and email should be found in the `user.name` and + // `user.email` configuration options. See the `config` section of this + // example file to see how to access config values. + git_signature_new((git_signature **)&author, + "Scott Chacon", "schacon@gmail.com", 123456789, 60); + git_signature_new((git_signature **)&cmtter, + "Scott A Chacon", "scott@github.com", 987654321, 90); + + // Commit objects need a tree to point to and optionally one or more + // parents. Here we're creating oid objects to create the commit with, + // but you can also use git_oid_fromstr(&tree_id, "28873d96b4e8f4e33ea30f4c682fd325f7ba56ac"); git_tree_lookup(&tree, repo, &tree_id); git_oid_fromstr(&parent_id, "f0877d0b841d75172ec404fc9370173dfffc20d1"); git_commit_lookup(&parent, repo, &parent_id); - // Here we actually create the commit object with a single call with all the values we need to create - // the commit. The SHA key is written to the `commit_id` variable here. + // Here we actually create the commit object with a single call with all + // the values we need to create the commit. The SHA key is written to the + // `commit_id` variable here. git_commit_create_v( &commit_id, /* out id */ repo, @@ -219,35 +256,42 @@ int main (int argc, char** argv) printf("New Commit: %s\n", out); // #### Tag Parsing - // You can parse and create tags with the [tag management API][tm], which functions very similarly - // to the commit lookup, parsing and creation methods, since the objects themselves are very similar. + + // You can parse and create tags with the [tag management API][tm], which + // functions very similarly to the commit lookup, parsing and creation + // methods, since the objects themselves are very similar. + // // [tm]: http://libgit2.github.com/libgit2/#HEAD/group/tag printf("\n*Tag Parsing*\n"); git_tag *tag; const char *tmessage, *tname; git_otype ttype; - // We create an oid for the tag object if we know the SHA and look it up in the repository the same - // way that we would a commit (or any other) object. + // We create an oid for the tag object if we know the SHA and look it up + // the same way that we would a commit (or any other object). git_oid_fromstr(&oid, "bc422d45275aca289c51d79830b45cecebff7c3a"); error = git_tag_lookup(&tag, repo, &oid); + check_error(error, "looking up tag"); - // Now that we have the tag object, we can extract the information it generally contains: the target - // (usually a commit object), the type of the target object (usually 'commit'), the name ('v1.0'), - // the tagger (a git_signature - name, email, timestamp), and the tag message. + // Now that we have the tag object, we can extract the information it + // generally contains: the target (usually a commit object), the type of + // the target object (usually 'commit'), the name ('v1.0'), the tagger (a + // git_signature - name, email, timestamp), and the tag message. git_tag_target((git_object **)&commit, tag); - tname = git_tag_name(tag); // "test" - ttype = git_tag_target_type(tag); // GIT_OBJ_COMMIT (otype enum) - tmessage = git_tag_message(tag); // "tag message\n" + tname = git_tag_name(tag); // "test" + ttype = git_tag_target_type(tag); // GIT_OBJ_COMMIT (otype enum) + tmessage = git_tag_message(tag); // "tag message\n" printf("Tag Message: %s\n", tmessage); git_commit_free(commit); // #### Tree Parsing - // [Tree parsing][tp] is a bit different than the other objects, in that we have a subtype which is the - // tree entry. This is not an actual object type in Git, but a useful structure for parsing and - // traversing tree entries. + + // [Tree parsing][tp] is a bit different than the other objects, in that + // we have a subtype which is the tree entry. This is not an actual + // object type in Git, but a useful structure for parsing and traversing + // tree entries. // // [tp]: http://libgit2.github.com/libgit2/#HEAD/group/tree printf("\n*Tree Parsing*\n"); @@ -259,31 +303,36 @@ int main (int argc, char** argv) git_oid_fromstr(&oid, "2a741c18ac5ff082a7caaec6e74db3075a1906b5"); git_tree_lookup(&tree, repo, &oid); - // Getting the count of entries in the tree so you can iterate over them if you want to. + // Getting the count of entries in the tree so you can iterate over them + // if you want to. size_t cnt = git_tree_entrycount(tree); // 3 printf("tree entries: %d\n", (int)cnt); entry = git_tree_entry_byindex(tree, 0); printf("Entry name: %s\n", git_tree_entry_name(entry)); // "hello.c" - // You can also access tree entries by name if you know the name of the entry you're looking for. + // You can also access tree entries by name if you know the name of the + // entry you're looking for. entry = git_tree_entry_byname(tree, "hello.c"); git_tree_entry_name(entry); // "hello.c" - // Once you have the entry object, you can access the content or subtree (or commit, in the case - // of submodules) that it points to. You can also get the mode if you want. + // Once you have the entry object, you can access the content or subtree + // (or commit, in the case of submodules) that it points to. You can also + // get the mode if you want. git_tree_entry_to_object(&objt, repo, entry); // blob // Remember to close the looked-up object once you are done using it git_object_free(objt); // #### Blob Parsing - // - // The last object type is the simplest and requires the least parsing help. Blobs are just file - // contents and can contain anything, there is no structure to it. The main advantage to using the - // [simple blob api][ba] is that when you're creating blobs you don't have to calculate the size - // of the content. There is also a helper for reading a file from disk and writing it to the db and - // getting the oid back so you don't have to do all those steps yourself. + + // The last object type is the simplest and requires the least parsing + // help. Blobs are just file contents and can contain anything, there is + // no structure to it. The main advantage to using the [simple blob + // api][ba] is that when you're creating blobs you don't have to calculate + // the size of the content. There is also a helper for reading a file + // from disk and writing it to the db and getting the oid back so you + // don't have to do all those steps yourself. // // [ba]: http://libgit2.github.com/libgit2/#HEAD/group/blob @@ -294,19 +343,21 @@ int main (int argc, char** argv) git_blob_lookup(&blob, repo, &oid); // You can access a buffer with the raw contents of the blob directly. - // Note that this buffer may not be contain ASCII data for certain blobs (e.g. binary files): - // do not consider the buffer a NULL-terminated string, and use the `git_blob_rawsize` attribute to - // find out its exact size in bytes + // Note that this buffer may not be contain ASCII data for certain blobs + // (e.g. binary files): do not consider the buffer a NULL-terminated + // string, and use the `git_blob_rawsize` attribute to find out its exact + // size in bytes printf("Blob Size: %ld\n", (long)git_blob_rawsize(blob)); // 8 git_blob_rawcontent(blob); // "content" // ### Revwalking - // - // The libgit2 [revision walking api][rw] provides methods to traverse the directed graph created - // by the parent pointers of the commit objects. Since all commits point back to the commit that - // came directly before them, you can walk this parentage as a graph and find all the commits that - // were ancestors of (reachable from) a given starting point. This can allow you to create `git log` - // type functionality. + + // The libgit2 [revision walking api][rw] provides methods to traverse the + // directed graph created by the parent pointers of the commit objects. + // Since all commits point back to the commit that came directly before + // them, you can walk this parentage as a graph and find all the commits + // that were ancestors of (reachable from) a given starting point. This + // can allow you to create `git log` type functionality. // // [rw]: http://libgit2.github.com/libgit2/#HEAD/group/revwalk @@ -316,11 +367,13 @@ int main (int argc, char** argv) git_oid_fromstr(&oid, "f0877d0b841d75172ec404fc9370173dfffc20d1"); - // To use the revwalker, create a new walker, tell it how you want to sort the output and then push - // one or more starting points onto the walker. If you want to emulate the output of `git log` you - // would push the SHA of the commit that HEAD points to into the walker and then start traversing them. - // You can also 'hide' commits that you want to stop at or not see any of their ancestors. So if you - // want to emulate `git log branch1..branch2`, you would push the oid of `branch2` and hide the oid + // To use the revwalker, create a new walker, tell it how you want to sort + // the output and then push one or more starting points onto the walker. + // If you want to emulate the output of `git log` you would push the SHA + // of the commit that HEAD points to into the walker and then start + // traversing them. You can also 'hide' commits that you want to stop at + // or not see any of their ancestors. So if you want to emulate `git log + // branch1..branch2`, you would push the oid of `branch2` and hide the oid // of `branch1`. git_revwalk_new(&walk, repo); git_revwalk_sorting(walk, GIT_SORT_TOPOLOGICAL | GIT_SORT_REVERSE); @@ -329,28 +382,32 @@ int main (int argc, char** argv) const git_signature *cauth; const char *cmsg; - // Now that we have the starting point pushed onto the walker, we can start asking for ancestors. It - // will return them in the sorting order we asked for as commit oids. - // We can then lookup and parse the commited pointed at by the returned OID; - // note that this operation is specially fast since the raw contents of the commit object will - // be cached in memory + // Now that we have the starting point pushed onto the walker, we start + // asking for ancestors. It will return them in the sorting order we asked + // for as commit oids. We can then lookup and parse the commited pointed + // at by the returned OID; note that this operation is specially fast + // since the raw contents of the commit object will be cached in memory while ((git_revwalk_next(&oid, walk)) == 0) { error = git_commit_lookup(&wcommit, repo, &oid); + check_error(error, "looking up commit during revwalk"); + cmsg = git_commit_message(wcommit); cauth = git_commit_author(wcommit); printf("%s (%s)\n", cmsg, cauth->email); + git_commit_free(wcommit); } - // Like the other objects, be sure to free the revwalker when you're done to prevent memory leaks. - // Also, make sure that the repository being walked it not deallocated while the walk is in - // progress, or it will result in undefined behavior + // Like the other objects, be sure to free the revwalker when you're done + // to prevent memory leaks. Also, make sure that the repository being + // walked it not deallocated while the walk is in progress, or it will + // result in undefined behavior git_revwalk_free(walk); // ### Index File Manipulation - // - // The [index file API][gi] allows you to read, traverse, update and write the Git index file - // (sometimes thought of as the staging area). + + // The [index file API][gi] allows you to read, traverse, update and write + // the Git index file (sometimes thought of as the staging area). // // [gi]: http://libgit2.github.com/libgit2/#HEAD/group/index @@ -359,15 +416,18 @@ int main (int argc, char** argv) git_index *index; unsigned int i, ecount; - // You can either open the index from the standard location in an open repository, as we're doing - // here, or you can open and manipulate any index file with `git_index_open_bare()`. The index - // for the repository will be located and loaded from disk. + // You can either open the index from the standard location in an open + // repository, as we're doing here, or you can open and manipulate any + // index file with `git_index_open_bare()`. The index for the repository + // will be located and loaded from disk. git_repository_index(&index, repo); - // For each entry in the index, you can get a bunch of information including the SHA (oid), path - // and mode which map to the tree objects that are written out. It also has filesystem properties - // to help determine what to inspect for changes (ctime, mtime, dev, ino, uid, gid, file_size and flags) - // All these properties are exported publicly in the `git_index_entry` struct + // For each entry in the index, you can get a bunch of information + // including the SHA (oid), path and mode which map to the tree objects + // that are written out. It also has filesystem properties to help + // determine what to inspect for changes (ctime, mtime, dev, ino, uid, + // gid, file_size and flags) All these properties are exported publicly in + // the `git_index_entry` struct ecount = git_index_entrycount(index); for (i = 0; i < ecount; ++i) { const git_index_entry *e = git_index_get_byindex(index, i); @@ -380,24 +440,25 @@ int main (int argc, char** argv) git_index_free(index); // ### References - // - // The [reference API][ref] allows you to list, resolve, create and update references such as - // branches, tags and remote references (everything in the .git/refs directory). + + // The [reference API][ref] allows you to list, resolve, create and update + // references such as branches, tags and remote references (everything in + // the .git/refs directory). // // [ref]: http://libgit2.github.com/libgit2/#HEAD/group/reference printf("\n*Reference Listing*\n"); - // Here we will implement something like `git for-each-ref` simply listing out all available - // references and the object SHA they resolve to. + // Here we will implement something like `git for-each-ref` simply listing + // out all available references and the object SHA they resolve to. git_strarray ref_list; git_reference_list(&ref_list, repo, GIT_REF_LISTALL); const char *refname; git_reference *ref; - // Now that we have the list of reference names, we can lookup each ref one at a time and - // resolve them to the SHA, then print both values out. + // Now that we have the list of reference names, we can lookup each ref + // one at a time and resolve them to the SHA, then print both values out. for (i = 0; i < ref_list.count; ++i) { refname = ref_list.strings[i]; git_reference_lookup(&ref, repo, refname); @@ -420,9 +481,9 @@ int main (int argc, char** argv) git_strarray_free(&ref_list); // ### Config Files - // - // The [config API][config] allows you to list and updatee config values in - // any of the accessible config file locations (system, global, local). + + // The [config API][config] allows you to list and updatee config values + // in any of the accessible config file locations (system, global, local). // // [config]: http://libgit2.github.com/libgit2/#HEAD/group/config |