Verifying a bundle requires us to have a repository. This is encoded in `verify_bundle()`, which will return an error if there is no repository. We call `open_bundle()` before we call `verify_bundle()` though, which already performs some verifications even though we may ultimately abort due to a missing repository. This is problematic because `open_bundle()` already reads the bundle header and verifies that it contains a properly formatted hash. When there is no repository we have no clue what hash function to expect though, so we always end up assuming SHA1 here, which may or may not be correct. Furthermore, we are about to stop initializing `the_hash_algo` when there is no repository, which will lead to segfaults. Check early on whether we have a repository to fix this issue. Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt --- builtin/bundle.c | 5 +++++ 1 file changed, 5 insertions(+) diff --git a/builtin/bundle.c b/builtin/bundle.c index 3ad11dc5d0..d5d41a8f67 100644 --- a/builtin/bundle.c +++ b/builtin/bundle.c @@ -140,6 +140,11 @@ static int cmd_bundle_verify(int argc, const char **argv, const char *prefix) { builtin_bundle_verify_usage, options, &bundle_file); /* bundle internals use argv[1] as further parameters */ + if (!startup_info->have_repository) { + ret = error(_("need a repository to verify a bundle")); + goto cleanup; + } + if ((bundle_fd = open_bundle(bundle_file, &header, &name)) < 0) { ret = 1; goto cleanup; -- 2.44.GIT