cr=$(printf "\015")
strategy_args=${strategy:+--strategy=$strategy}
+test -n "$strategy_opts" &&
eval '
for strategy_opt in '"$strategy_opts"'
do
die_with_patch () {
echo "$1" > "$state_dir"/stopped-sha
make_patch "$1"
- git rerere
die "$2"
}
}
die_abort () {
+ apply_autostash
rm -rf "$state_dir"
die "$1"
}
mark_action_done
do_pick $sha1 "$rest"
- warn "Stopped at $sha1... $rest"
+ sha1_abbrev=$(git rev-parse --short $sha1)
+ warn "Stopped at $sha1_abbrev... $rest"
exit_with_patch $sha1 0
;;
squash|s|fixup|f)
# $3: the input filename
check_commit_sha () {
badsha=0
- if test -z $1
+ if test -z "$1"
then
badsha=1
else
sha1_verif="$(git rev-parse --verify --quiet $1^{commit})"
- if test -z $sha1_verif
+ if test -z "$sha1_verif"
then
badsha=1
fi
# below were not inside any function, and expected to return
# to the function that dot-sourced us.
#
-# However, FreeBSD /bin/sh misbehaves on such a construct and
-# continues to run the statements that follow such a "return".
+# However, older (9.x) versions of FreeBSD /bin/sh misbehave on such a
+# construct and continue to run the statements that follow such a "return".
# As a work-around, we introduce an extra layer of a function
# here, and immediately call it after defining it.
git_rebase__interactive () {