config: use git_config_parse_key() in git_config_parse_parameter()

The parsing of one-shot assignments of configuration variables that
come from the command line historically was quite loose and allowed
anything to pass.  It also downcased everything in the variable name,
even a three-level <section>.<subsection>.<variable> name in which
the <subsection> part must be treated in a case sensitive manner.

Existing git_config_parse_key() helper is used to parse the variable
name that comes from the command line, i.e. "git config VAR VAL",
and handles these details correctly.  Replace the strbuf_tolower()
call in git_config_parse_parameter() with a call to it to correct
both issues.  git_config_parse_key() does a bit more things that are
not necessary for the purpose of this codepath (e.g. it allocates a
separate buffer to return the canonicalized variable name because it
takes a "const char *" input), but we are not in a performance-critical
codepath here.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
diff --git a/config.c b/config.c
index b8cce1d..1c1a152 100644
--- a/config.c
+++ b/config.c
@@ -295,7 +295,9 @@
 			       config_fn_t fn, void *data)
 {
 	const char *value;
+	char *canonical_name;
 	struct strbuf **pair;
+	int ret;
 
 	pair = strbuf_split_str(text, '=', 2);
 	if (!pair[0])
@@ -313,13 +315,15 @@
 		strbuf_list_free(pair);
 		return error("bogus config parameter: %s", text);
 	}
-	strbuf_tolower(pair[0]);
-	if (fn(pair[0]->buf, value, data) < 0) {
-		strbuf_list_free(pair);
-		return -1;
+
+	if (git_config_parse_key(pair[0]->buf, &canonical_name, NULL)) {
+		ret = -1;
+	} else {
+		ret = (fn(canonical_name, value, data) < 0) ? -1 : 0;
+		free(canonical_name);
 	}
 	strbuf_list_free(pair);
-	return 0;
+	return ret;
 }
 
 int git_config_from_parameters(config_fn_t fn, void *data)
diff --git a/t/t1300-repo-config.sh b/t/t1300-repo-config.sh
index 923bfc5..ea37102 100755
--- a/t/t1300-repo-config.sh
+++ b/t/t1300-repo-config.sh
@@ -1097,6 +1097,68 @@
 	test_cmp expect actual
 '
 
+test_expect_success 'last one wins: two level vars' '
+
+	# sec.var and sec.VAR are the same variable, as the first
+	# and the last level of a configuration variable name is
+	# case insensitive.
+
+	echo VAL >expect &&
+
+	git -c sec.var=val -c sec.VAR=VAL config --get sec.var >actual &&
+	test_cmp expect actual &&
+	git -c SEC.var=val -c sec.var=VAL config --get sec.var >actual &&
+	test_cmp expect actual &&
+
+	git -c sec.var=val -c sec.VAR=VAL config --get SEC.var >actual &&
+	test_cmp expect actual &&
+	git -c SEC.var=val -c sec.var=VAL config --get sec.VAR >actual &&
+	test_cmp expect actual
+'
+
+test_expect_success 'last one wins: three level vars' '
+
+	# v.a.r and v.A.r are not the same variable, as the middle
+	# level of a three-level configuration variable name is
+	# case sensitive.
+
+	echo val >expect &&
+	git -c v.a.r=val -c v.A.r=VAL config --get v.a.r >actual &&
+	test_cmp expect actual &&
+	git -c v.a.r=val -c v.A.r=VAL config --get V.a.R >actual &&
+	test_cmp expect actual &&
+
+	# v.a.r and V.a.R are the same variable, as the first
+	# and the last level of a configuration variable name is
+	# case insensitive.
+
+	echo VAL >expect &&
+	git -c v.a.r=val -c v.a.R=VAL config --get v.a.r >actual &&
+	test_cmp expect actual &&
+	git -c v.a.r=val -c V.a.r=VAL config --get v.a.r >actual &&
+	test_cmp expect actual &&
+	git -c v.a.r=val -c v.a.R=VAL config --get V.a.R >actual &&
+	test_cmp expect actual &&
+	git -c v.a.r=val -c V.a.r=VAL config --get V.a.R >actual &&
+	test_cmp expect actual
+'
+
+for VAR in a .a a. a.0b a."b c". a."b c".0d
+do
+	test_expect_success "git -c $VAR=VAL rejects invalid '$VAR'" '
+		test_must_fail git -c "$VAR=VAL" config -l
+	'
+done
+
+for VAR in a.b a."b c".d
+do
+	test_expect_success "git -c $VAR=VAL works with valid '$VAR'" '
+		echo VAL >expect &&
+		git -c "$VAR=VAL" config --get "$VAR" >actual &&
+		test_cmp expect actual
+	'
+done
+
 test_expect_success 'git -c is not confused by empty environment' '
 	GIT_CONFIG_PARAMETERS="" git -c x.one=1 config --list
 '