From: Junio C Hamano Date: Mon, 30 Sep 2019 04:19:32 +0000 (+0900) Subject: Merge branch 'bw/rebase-autostash-keep-current-branch' X-Git-Url: https://git.lorimer.id.au/gitweb.git/diff_plain/974bdb02058a82b57bcfebe184f57ebe74eecac5?hp=bf1e28e0ad9b1d0d04203ebc43b9008de1969503 Merge branch 'bw/rebase-autostash-keep-current-branch' "git rebase --autostash ", when is different from the current branch, incorrectly moved the tip of the current branch, which has been corrected. * bw/rebase-autostash-keep-current-branch: builtin/rebase.c: Remove pointless message builtin/rebase.c: make sure the active branch isn't moved when autostashing --- diff --git a/.gitignore b/.gitignore index 521d8f4fb4..fc445edea9 100644 --- a/.gitignore +++ b/.gitignore @@ -231,7 +231,6 @@ *.ipdb *.dll .vs/ -*.manifest Debug/ Release/ /UpgradeLog*.htm diff --git a/Documentation/RelNotes/2.24.0.txt b/Documentation/RelNotes/2.24.0.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..ff48d8582c --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/RelNotes/2.24.0.txt @@ -0,0 +1,143 @@ +Git 2.24 Release Notes +====================== + +Updates since v2.23 +------------------- + +Backward compatibility note + + * (no entry yet so far) + + +UI, Workflows & Features + + * We now have an active interim maintainer for the Git-Gui part of + the system. Praise and thank Pratyush Yadav for volunteering. + + * The command line parser learned "--end-of-options" notation; the + standard convention for scripters to have hardcoded set of options + first on the command line, and force the command to treat end-user + input as non-options, has been to use "--" as the delimiter, but + that would not work for commands that use "--" as a delimiter + between revs and pathspec. + + * A mechanism to affect the default setting for a (related) group of + configuration variables is introduced. + + * "git fetch" learned "--set-upstream" option to help those who first + clone from their private fork they intend to push to, add the true + upstream via "git remote add" and then "git fetch" from it. + + * Device-tree files learned their own userdiff patterns. + (merge 3c81760bc6 sb/userdiff-dts later to maint). + + * "git rebase --rebase-merges" learned to drive different merge + strategies and pass strategy specific options to them. + + * A new "pre-merge-commit" hook has been introduced. + + * Command line completion updates for "git -c var.name=val" have been + added. + + * The lazy clone machinery has been taught that there can be more + than one promisor remote and consult them in order when downloading + missing objects on demand. + + * The list-objects-filter API (used to create a sparse/lazy clone) + learned to take a combined filter specification. + + +Performance, Internal Implementation, Development Support etc. + + * The code to write commit-graph over given commit object names has + been made a bit more robust. + + * The first line of verbose output from each test piece now carries + the test name and number to help scanning with eyeballs. + + * Further clean-up of the initialization code. + + * xmalloc() used to have a mechanism to ditch memory and address + space resources as the last resort upon seeing an allocation + failure from the underlying malloc(), which made the code complex + and thread-unsafe with dubious benefit, as major memory resource + users already do limit their uses with various other mechanisms. + It has been simplified away. + + * Unnecessary full-tree diff in "git log -L" machinery has been + optimized away. + + * The http transport lacked some optimization the native transports + learned to avoid unnecessary ref advertisement, which has been + corrected. + + +Fixes since v2.23 +----------------- + + * "git grep --recurse-submodules" that looks at the working tree + files looked at the contents in the index in submodules, instead of + files in the working tree. + (merge 6a289d45c0 mt/grep-submodules-working-tree later to maint). + + * Codepaths to walk tree objects have been audited for integer + overflows and hardened. + (merge 5aa02f9868 jk/tree-walk-overflow later to maint). + + * "git pack-refs" can lose refs that are created while running, which + is getting corrected. + (merge a613d4f817 sc/pack-refs-deletion-racefix later to maint). + + * "git checkout" and "git restore" to re-populate the index from a + tree-ish (typically HEAD) did not work correctly for a path that + was removed and then added again with the intent-to-add bit, when + the corresponding working tree file was empty. This has been + corrected. + + * Compilation fix. + (merge 70597e8386 rs/nedalloc-fixlets later to maint). + + * "git gui" learned to call the clean-up procedure before exiting. + (merge 0d88f3d2c5 py/git-gui-do-quit later to maint). + + * We promoted the "indent heuristics" that decides where to split + diff hunks from experimental to the default a few years ago, but + some stale documentation still marked it as experimental, which has + been corrected. + (merge 64e5e1fba1 sg/diff-indent-heuristic-non-experimental later to maint). + + * Fix a mismerge that happened in 2.22 timeframe. + (merge acb7da05ac en/checkout-mismerge-fix later to maint). + + * "git archive" recorded incorrect length in extended pax header in + some corner cases, which has been corrected. + (merge 71d41ff651 rs/pax-extended-header-length-fix later to maint). + + * On-demand object fetching in lazy clone incorrectly tried to fetch + commits from submodule projects, while still working in the + superproject, which has been corrected. + (merge a63694f523 jt/diff-lazy-fetch-submodule-fix later to maint). + + * Prepare get_short_oid() codepath to be thread-safe. + (merge 7cfcb16b0e rs/sort-oid-array-thread-safe later to maint). + + * "for-each-ref" and friends that show refs did not protect themselves + against ancient tags that did not record tagger names when asked to + show "%(taggername)", which have been corrected. + (merge 8b3f33ef11 mp/for-each-ref-missing-name-or-email later to maint). + + * The "git am" based backend of "git rebase" ignored the result of + updating ".gitattributes" done in one step when replaying + subsequent steps. + (merge 2c65d90f75 bc/reread-attributes-during-rebase later to maint). + + * Tell cURL library to use the same malloc() implementation, with the + xmalloc() wrapper, as the rest of the system, for consistency. + (merge 93b980e58f cb/curl-use-xmalloc later to maint). + + * Other code cleanup, docfix, build fix, etc. + (merge d1387d3895 en/fast-import-merge-doc later to maint). + (merge 1c24a54ea4 bm/repository-layout-typofix later to maint). + (merge 415b770b88 ds/midx-expire-repack later to maint). + (merge 19800bdc3f nd/diff-parseopt later to maint). + (merge 58166c2e9d tg/t0021-racefix later to maint). diff --git a/Documentation/RelNotes/2.7.1.txt b/Documentation/RelNotes/2.7.1.txt index 6553d69e33..6323feaf64 100644 --- a/Documentation/RelNotes/2.7.1.txt +++ b/Documentation/RelNotes/2.7.1.txt @@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ Fixes since v2.7 setting GIT_WORK_TREE environment themselves. * The "exclude_list" structure has the usual "alloc, nr" pair of - fields to be used by ALLOC_GROW(), but clear_exclude_list() forgot + fields to be used by ALLOC_GROW(), but clear_pattern_list() forgot to reset 'alloc' to 0 when it cleared 'nr' to discard the managed array. diff --git a/Documentation/RelNotes/2.8.0.txt b/Documentation/RelNotes/2.8.0.txt index 25079710fa..5fbe1b86ee 100644 --- a/Documentation/RelNotes/2.8.0.txt +++ b/Documentation/RelNotes/2.8.0.txt @@ -270,7 +270,7 @@ notes for details). setting GIT_WORK_TREE environment themselves. * The "exclude_list" structure has the usual "alloc, nr" pair of - fields to be used by ALLOC_GROW(), but clear_exclude_list() forgot + fields to be used by ALLOC_GROW(), but clear_pattern_list() forgot to reset 'alloc' to 0 when it cleared 'nr' to discard the managed array. diff --git a/Documentation/config.txt b/Documentation/config.txt index e3f5bc3396..77f3b1486b 100644 --- a/Documentation/config.txt +++ b/Documentation/config.txt @@ -345,6 +345,8 @@ include::config/difftool.txt[] include::config/fastimport.txt[] +include::config/feature.txt[] + include::config/fetch.txt[] include::config/format.txt[] diff --git a/Documentation/config/core.txt b/Documentation/config/core.txt index 75538d27e7..852d2ba37a 100644 --- a/Documentation/config/core.txt +++ b/Documentation/config/core.txt @@ -86,7 +86,9 @@ core.untrackedCache:: it will automatically be removed, if set to `false`. Before setting it to `true`, you should check that mtime is working properly on your system. - See linkgit:git-update-index[1]. `keep` by default. + See linkgit:git-update-index[1]. `keep` by default, unless + `feature.manyFiles` is enabled which sets this setting to + `true` by default. core.checkStat:: When missing or is set to `default`, many fields in the stat @@ -577,7 +579,7 @@ the `GIT_NOTES_REF` environment variable. See linkgit:git-notes[1]. core.commitGraph:: If true, then git will read the commit-graph file (if it exists) - to parse the graph structure of commits. Defaults to false. See + to parse the graph structure of commits. Defaults to true. See linkgit:git-commit-graph[1] for more information. core.useReplaceRefs:: diff --git a/Documentation/config/diff.txt b/Documentation/config/diff.txt index 5afb5a2cbc..ff09f1cf73 100644 --- a/Documentation/config/diff.txt +++ b/Documentation/config/diff.txt @@ -189,7 +189,7 @@ diff.guitool:: include::../mergetools-diff.txt[] diff.indentHeuristic:: - Set this option to `true` to enable experimental heuristics + Set this option to `false` to disable the default heuristics that shift diff hunk boundaries to make patches easier to read. diff.algorithm:: diff --git a/Documentation/config/feature.txt b/Documentation/config/feature.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..545522f306 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/config/feature.txt @@ -0,0 +1,29 @@ +feature.*:: + The config settings that start with `feature.` modify the defaults of + a group of other config settings. These groups are created by the Git + developer community as recommended defaults and are subject to change. + In particular, new config options may be added with different defaults. + +feature.experimental:: + Enable config options that are new to Git, and are being considered for + future defaults. Config settings included here may be added or removed + with each release, including minor version updates. These settings may + have unintended interactions since they are so new. Please enable this + setting if you are interested in providing feedback on experimental + features. The new default values are: ++ +* `pack.useSparse=true` uses a new algorithm when constructing a pack-file +which can improve `git push` performance in repos with many files. ++ +* `fetch.negotiationAlgorithm=skipping` may improve fetch negotiation times by +skipping more commits at a time, reducing the number of round trips. + +feature.manyFiles:: + Enable config options that optimize for repos with many files in the + working directory. With many files, commands such as `git status` and + `git checkout` may be slow and these new defaults improve performance: ++ +* `index.version=4` enables path-prefix compression in the index. ++ +* `core.untrackedCache=true` enables the untracked cache. This setting assumes +that mtime is working on your machine. diff --git a/Documentation/config/fetch.txt b/Documentation/config/fetch.txt index ba890b5884..d402110638 100644 --- a/Documentation/config/fetch.txt +++ b/Documentation/config/fetch.txt @@ -59,7 +59,8 @@ fetch.negotiationAlgorithm:: effort to converge faster, but may result in a larger-than-necessary packfile; The default is "default" which instructs Git to use the default algorithm that never skips commits (unless the server has acknowledged it or one - of its descendants). + of its descendants). If `feature.experimental` is enabled, then this + setting defaults to "skipping". Unknown values will cause 'git fetch' to error out. + See also the `--negotiation-tip` option for linkgit:git-fetch[1]. diff --git a/Documentation/config/format.txt b/Documentation/config/format.txt index 414a5a8a9d..cb629fa769 100644 --- a/Documentation/config/format.txt +++ b/Documentation/config/format.txt @@ -77,6 +77,7 @@ format.coverLetter:: A boolean that controls whether to generate a cover-letter when format-patch is invoked, but in addition can be set to "auto", to generate a cover-letter only when there's more than one patch. + Default is false. format.outputDirectory:: Set a custom directory to store the resulting files instead of the diff --git a/Documentation/config/gc.txt b/Documentation/config/gc.txt index 02b92b18b5..00ea0a678e 100644 --- a/Documentation/config/gc.txt +++ b/Documentation/config/gc.txt @@ -63,7 +63,7 @@ gc.writeCommitGraph:: If true, then gc will rewrite the commit-graph file when linkgit:git-gc[1] is run. When using `git gc --auto` the commit-graph will be updated if housekeeping is - required. Default is false. See linkgit:git-commit-graph[1] + required. Default is true. See linkgit:git-commit-graph[1] for details. gc.logExpiry:: diff --git a/Documentation/config/index.txt b/Documentation/config/index.txt index f181503041..7cb50b37e9 100644 --- a/Documentation/config/index.txt +++ b/Documentation/config/index.txt @@ -24,3 +24,4 @@ index.threads:: index.version:: Specify the version with which new index files should be initialized. This does not affect existing repositories. + If `feature.manyFiles` is enabled, then the default is 4. diff --git a/Documentation/config/pack.txt b/Documentation/config/pack.txt index 9cdcfa7324..1d66f0c992 100644 --- a/Documentation/config/pack.txt +++ b/Documentation/config/pack.txt @@ -112,7 +112,8 @@ pack.useSparse:: objects. This can have significant performance benefits when computing a pack to send a small change. However, it is possible that extra objects are added to the pack-file if the included - commits contain certain types of direct renames. + commits contain certain types of direct renames. Default is `false` + unless `feature.experimental` is enabled. pack.writeBitmaps (deprecated):: This is a deprecated synonym for `repack.writeBitmaps`. diff --git a/Documentation/config/remote.txt b/Documentation/config/remote.txt index 6c4cad83a2..a8e6437a90 100644 --- a/Documentation/config/remote.txt +++ b/Documentation/config/remote.txt @@ -76,3 +76,11 @@ remote..pruneTags:: + See also `remote..prune` and the PRUNING section of linkgit:git-fetch[1]. + +remote..promisor:: + When set to true, this remote will be used to fetch promisor + objects. + +remote..partialclonefilter:: + The filter that will be applied when fetching from this + promisor remote. diff --git a/Documentation/fetch-options.txt b/Documentation/fetch-options.txt index 3c9b4f9e09..99df1f3d4e 100644 --- a/Documentation/fetch-options.txt +++ b/Documentation/fetch-options.txt @@ -169,6 +169,13 @@ ifndef::git-pull[] Disable recursive fetching of submodules (this has the same effect as using the `--recurse-submodules=no` option). +--set-upstream:: + If the remote is fetched successfully, pull and add upstream + (tracking) reference, used by argument-less + linkgit:git-pull[1] and other commands. For more information, + see `branch..merge` and `branch..remote` in + linkgit:git-config[1]. + --submodule-prefix=:: Prepend to paths printed in informative messages such as "Fetching submodule foo". This option is used diff --git a/Documentation/git-fast-export.txt b/Documentation/git-fast-export.txt index cc940eb9ad..784e934009 100644 --- a/Documentation/git-fast-export.txt +++ b/Documentation/git-fast-export.txt @@ -17,9 +17,9 @@ This program dumps the given revisions in a form suitable to be piped into 'git fast-import'. You can use it as a human-readable bundle replacement (see -linkgit:git-bundle[1]), or as a kind of an interactive -'git filter-branch'. - +linkgit:git-bundle[1]), or as a format that can be edited before being +fed to 'git fast-import' in order to do history rewrites (an ability +relied on by tools like 'git filter-repo'). OPTIONS ------- diff --git a/Documentation/git-fast-import.txt b/Documentation/git-fast-import.txt index fad327aecc..0bb276269e 100644 --- a/Documentation/git-fast-import.txt +++ b/Documentation/git-fast-import.txt @@ -391,7 +391,7 @@ change to the project. ('encoding' SP )? data ('from' SP LF)? - ('merge' SP LF)? + ('merge' SP LF)* (filemodify | filedelete | filecopy | filerename | filedeleteall | notemodify)* LF? .... diff --git a/Documentation/git-filter-branch.txt b/Documentation/git-filter-branch.txt index 6b53dd7e06..5876598852 100644 --- a/Documentation/git-filter-branch.txt +++ b/Documentation/git-filter-branch.txt @@ -16,6 +16,19 @@ SYNOPSIS [--original ] [-d ] [-f | --force] [--state-branch ] [--] [...] +WARNING +------- +'git filter-branch' has a plethora of pitfalls that can produce non-obvious +manglings of the intended history rewrite (and can leave you with little +time to investigate such problems since it has such abysmal performance). +These safety and performance issues cannot be backward compatibly fixed and +as such, its use is not recommended. Please use an alternative history +filtering tool such as https://github.com/newren/git-filter-repo/[git +filter-repo]. If you still need to use 'git filter-branch', please +carefully read <> (and <>) to learn about the land +mines of filter-branch, and then vigilantly avoid as many of the hazards +listed there as reasonably possible. + DESCRIPTION ----------- Lets you rewrite Git revision history by rewriting the branches mentioned @@ -445,36 +458,236 @@ warned. (or if your git-gc is not new enough to support arguments to `--prune`, use `git repack -ad; git prune` instead). -NOTES ------ - -git-filter-branch allows you to make complex shell-scripted rewrites -of your Git history, but you probably don't need this flexibility if -you're simply _removing unwanted data_ like large files or passwords. -For those operations you may want to consider -http://rtyley.github.io/bfg-repo-cleaner/[The BFG Repo-Cleaner], -a JVM-based alternative to git-filter-branch, typically at least -10-50x faster for those use-cases, and with quite different -characteristics: - -* Any particular version of a file is cleaned exactly _once_. The BFG, - unlike git-filter-branch, does not give you the opportunity to - handle a file differently based on where or when it was committed - within your history. This constraint gives the core performance - benefit of The BFG, and is well-suited to the task of cleansing bad - data - you don't care _where_ the bad data is, you just want it - _gone_. - -* By default The BFG takes full advantage of multi-core machines, - cleansing commit file-trees in parallel. git-filter-branch cleans - commits sequentially (i.e. in a single-threaded manner), though it - _is_ possible to write filters that include their own parallelism, - in the scripts executed against each commit. - -* The http://rtyley.github.io/bfg-repo-cleaner/#examples[command options] - are much more restrictive than git-filter branch, and dedicated just - to the tasks of removing unwanted data- e.g: - `--strip-blobs-bigger-than 1M`. +[[PERFORMANCE]] +PERFORMANCE +----------- + +The performance of git-filter-branch is glacially slow; its design makes it +impossible for a backward-compatible implementation to ever be fast: + +* In editing files, git-filter-branch by design checks out each and +every commit as it existed in the original repo. If your repo has 10\^5 +files and 10\^5 commits, but each commit only modifies 5 files, then +git-filter-branch will make you do 10\^10 modifications, despite only +having (at most) 5*10^5 unique blobs. + +* If you try and cheat and try to make git-filter-branch only work on +files modified in a commit, then two things happen + + ** you run into problems with deletions whenever the user is simply + trying to rename files (because attempting to delete files that + don't exist looks like a no-op; it takes some chicanery to remap + deletes across file renames when the renames happen via arbitrary + user-provided shell) + + ** even if you succeed at the map-deletes-for-renames chicanery, you + still technically violate backward compatibility because users are + allowed to filter files in ways that depend upon topology of + commits instead of filtering solely based on file contents or names + (though this has not been observed in the wild). + +* Even if you don't need to edit files but only want to e.g. rename or +remove some and thus can avoid checking out each file (i.e. you can use +--index-filter), you still are passing shell snippets for your filters. +This means that for every commit, you have to have a prepared git repo +where those filters can be run. That's a significant setup. + +* Further, several additional files are created or updated per commit by +git-filter-branch. Some of these are for supporting the convenience +functions provided by git-filter-branch (such as map()), while others +are for keeping track of internal state (but could have also been +accessed by user filters; one of git-filter-branch's regression tests +does so). This essentially amounts to using the filesystem as an IPC +mechanism between git-filter-branch and the user-provided filters. +Disks tend to be a slow IPC mechanism, and writing these files also +effectively represents a forced synchronization point between separate +processes that we hit with every commit. + +* The user-provided shell commands will likely involve a pipeline of +commands, resulting in the creation of many processes per commit. +Creating and running another process takes a widely varying amount of +time between operating systems, but on any platform it is very slow +relative to invoking a function. + +* git-filter-branch itself is written in shell, which is kind of slow. +This is the one performance issue that could be backward-compatibly +fixed, but compared to the above problems that are intrinsic to the +design of git-filter-branch, the language of the tool itself is a +relatively minor issue. + + ** Side note: Unfortunately, people tend to fixate on the + written-in-shell aspect and periodically ask if git-filter-branch + could be rewritten in another language to fix the performance + issues. Not only does that ignore the bigger intrinsic problems + with the design, it'd help less than you'd expect: if + git-filter-branch itself were not shell, then the convenience + functions (map(), skip_commit(), etc) and the `--setup` argument + could no longer be executed once at the beginning of the program + but would instead need to be prepended to every user filter (and + thus re-executed with every commit). + +The https://github.com/newren/git-filter-repo/[git filter-repo] tool is +an alternative to git-filter-branch which does not suffer from these +performance problems or the safety problems (mentioned below). For those +with existing tooling which relies upon git-filter-branch, 'git +repo-filter' also provides +https://github.com/newren/git-filter-repo/blob/master/contrib/filter-repo-demos/filter-lamely[filter-lamely], +a drop-in git-filter-branch replacement (with a few caveats). While +filter-lamely suffers from all the same safety issues as +git-filter-branch, it at least ameloriates the performance issues a +little. + +[[SAFETY]] +SAFETY +------ + +git-filter-branch is riddled with gotchas resulting in various ways to +easily corrupt repos or end up with a mess worse than what you started +with: + +* Someone can have a set of "working and tested filters" which they +document or provide to a coworker, who then runs them on a different OS +where the same commands are not working/tested (some examples in the +git-filter-branch manpage are also affected by this). BSD vs. GNU +userland differences can really bite. If lucky, error messages are +spewed. But just as likely, the commands either don't do the filtering +requested, or silently corrupt by making some unwanted change. The +unwanted change may only affect a few commits, so it's not necessarily +obvious either. (The fact that problems won't necessarily be obvious +means they are likely to go unnoticed until the rewritten history is in +use for quite a while, at which point it's really hard to justify +another flag-day for another rewrite.) + +* Filenames with spaces are often mishandled by shell snippets since +they cause problems for shell pipelines. Not everyone is familiar with +find -print0, xargs -0, git-ls-files -z, etc. Even people who are +familiar with these may assume such flags are not relevant because +someone else renamed any such files in their repo back before the person +doing the filtering joined the project. And often, even those familiar +with handling arguments with spaces may not do so just because they +aren't in the mindset of thinking about everything that could possibly +go wrong. + +* Non-ascii filenames can be silently removed despite being in a desired +directory. Keeping only wanted paths is often done using pipelines like +`git ls-files | grep -v ^WANTED_DIR/ | xargs git rm`. ls-files will +only quote filenames if needed, so folks may not notice that one of the +files didn't match the regex (at least not until it's much too late). +Yes, someone who knows about core.quotePath can avoid this (unless they +have other special characters like \t, \n, or "), and people who use +ls-files -z with something other than grep can avoid this, but that +doesn't mean they will. + +* Similarly, when moving files around, one can find that filenames with +non-ascii or special characters end up in a different directory, one +that includes a double quote character. (This is technically the same +issue as above with quoting, but perhaps an interesting different way +that it can and has manifested as a problem.) + +* It's far too easy to accidentally mix up old and new history. It's +still possible with any tool, but git-filter-branch almost invites it. +If lucky, the only downside is users getting frustrated that they don't +know how to shrink their repo and remove the old stuff. If unlucky, +they merge old and new history and end up with multiple "copies" of each +commit, some of which have unwanted or sensitive files and others which +don't. This comes about in multiple different ways: + + ** the default to only doing a partial history rewrite ('--all' is not + the default and few examples show it) + + ** the fact that there's no automatic post-run cleanup + + ** the fact that --tag-name-filter (when used to rename tags) doesn't + remove the old tags but just adds new ones with the new name + + ** the fact that little educational information is provided to inform + users of the ramifications of a rewrite and how to avoid mixing old + and new history. For example, this man page discusses how users + need to understand that they need to rebase their changes for all + their branches on top of new history (or delete and reclone), but + that's only one of multiple concerns to consider. See the + "DISCUSSION" section of the git filter-repo manual page for more + details. + +* Annotated tags can be accidentally converted to lightweight tags, due +to either of two issues: + + ** Someone can do a history rewrite, realize they messed up, restore + from the backups in refs/original/, and then redo their + git-filter-branch command. (The backup in refs/original/ is not a + real backup; it dereferences tags first.) + + ** Running git-filter-branch with either --tags or --all in your + . In order to retain annotated tags as + annotated, you must use --tag-name-filter (and must not have + restored from refs/original/ in a previously botched rewrite). + +* Any commit messages that specify an encoding will become corrupted +by the rewrite; git-filter-branch ignores the encoding, takes the original +bytes, and feeds it to commit-tree without telling it the proper +encoding. (This happens whether or not --msg-filter is used.) + +* Commit messages (even if they are all UTF-8) by default become +corrupted due to not being updated -- any references to other commit +hashes in commit messages will now refer to no-longer-extant commits. + +* There are no facilities for helping users find what unwanted crud they +should delete, which means they are much more likely to have incomplete +or partial cleanups that sometimes result in confusion and people +wasting time trying to understand. (For example, folks tend to just +look for big files to delete instead of big directories or extensions, +and once they do so, then sometime later folks using the new repository +who are going through history will notice a build artifact directory +that has some files but not others, or a cache of dependencies +(node_modules or similar) which couldn't have ever been functional since +it's missing some files.) + +* If --prune-empty isn't specified, then the filtering process can +create hoards of confusing empty commits + +* If --prune-empty is specified, then intentionally placed empty +commits from before the filtering operation are also pruned instead of +just pruning commits that became empty due to filtering rules. + +* If --prune empty is specified, sometimes empty commits are missed +and left around anyway (a somewhat rare bug, but it happens...) + +* A minor issue, but users who have a goal to update all names and +emails in a repository may be led to --env-filter which will only update +authors and committers, missing taggers. + +* If the user provides a --tag-name-filter that maps multiple tags to +the same name, no warning or error is provided; git-filter-branch simply +overwrites each tag in some undocumented pre-defined order resulting in +only one tag at the end. (A git-filter-branch regression test requires +this surprising behavior.) + +Also, the poor performance of git-filter-branch often leads to safety +issues: + +* Coming up with the correct shell snippet to do the filtering you want +is sometimes difficult unless you're just doing a trivial modification +such as deleting a couple files. Unfortunately, people often learn if +the snippet is right or wrong by trying it out, but the rightness or +wrongness can vary depending on special circumstances (spaces in +filenames, non-ascii filenames, funny author names or emails, invalid +timezones, presence of grafts or replace objects, etc.), meaning they +may have to wait a long time, hit an error, then restart. The +performance of git-filter-branch is so bad that this cycle is painful, +reducing the time available to carefully re-check (to say nothing about +what it does to the patience of the person doing the rewrite even if +they do technically have more time available). This problem is extra +compounded because errors from broken filters may not be shown for a +long time and/or get lost in a sea of output. Even worse, broken +filters often just result in silent incorrect rewrites. + +* To top it all off, even when users finally find working commands, they +naturally want to share them. But they may be unaware that their repo +didn't have some special cases that someone else's does. So, when +someone else with a different repository runs the same commands, they +get hit by the problems above. Or, the user just runs commands that +really were vetted for special cases, but they run it on a different OS +where it doesn't work, as noted above. GIT --- diff --git a/Documentation/git-format-patch.txt b/Documentation/git-format-patch.txt index b9b97e63ae..0ac56f4b70 100644 --- a/Documentation/git-format-patch.txt +++ b/Documentation/git-format-patch.txt @@ -17,9 +17,9 @@ SYNOPSIS [--signature-file=] [-n | --numbered | -N | --no-numbered] [--start-number ] [--numbered-files] - [--in-reply-to=Message-Id] [--suffix=.] + [--in-reply-to=] [--suffix=.] [--ignore-if-in-upstream] - [--rfc] [--subject-prefix=Subject-Prefix] + [--rfc] [--subject-prefix=] [(--reroll-count|-v) ] [--to=] [--cc=] [--[no-]cover-letter] [--quiet] @@ -159,9 +159,9 @@ Beware that the default for 'git send-email' is to thread emails itself. If you want `git format-patch` to take care of threading, you will want to ensure that threading is disabled for `git send-email`. ---in-reply-to=Message-Id:: +--in-reply-to=:: Make the first mail (or all the mails with `--no-thread`) appear as a - reply to the given Message-Id, which avoids breaking threads to + reply to the given , which avoids breaking threads to provide a new patch series. --ignore-if-in-upstream:: @@ -171,9 +171,9 @@ will want to ensure that threading is disabled for `git send-email`. patches being generated, and any patch that matches is ignored. ---subject-prefix=:: +--subject-prefix=:: Instead of the standard '[PATCH]' prefix in the subject - line, instead use '[]'. This + line, instead use '[]'. This allows for useful naming of a patch series, and can be combined with the `--numbered` option. @@ -314,7 +314,8 @@ you can use `--suffix=-patch` to get `0001-description-of-my-change-patch`. --base=:: Record the base tree information to identify the state the patch series applies to. See the BASE TREE INFORMATION section - below for details. + below for details. If is "auto", a base commit is + automatically chosen. --root:: Treat the revision argument as a , even if it @@ -330,8 +331,9 @@ CONFIGURATION ------------- You can specify extra mail header lines to be added to each message, defaults for the subject prefix and file suffix, number patches when -outputting more than one patch, add "To" or "Cc:" headers, configure -attachments, and sign off patches with configuration variables. +outputting more than one patch, add "To:" or "Cc:" headers, configure +attachments, change the patch output directory, and sign off patches +with configuration variables. ------------ [format] @@ -343,7 +345,8 @@ attachments, and sign off patches with configuration variables. cc = attach [ = mime-boundary-string ] signOff = true - coverletter = auto + outputDirectory = + coverLetter = auto ------------ diff --git a/Documentation/git-gc.txt b/Documentation/git-gc.txt index 247f765604..0c114ad1ca 100644 --- a/Documentation/git-gc.txt +++ b/Documentation/git-gc.txt @@ -115,15 +115,14 @@ NOTES ----- 'git gc' tries very hard not to delete objects that are referenced -anywhere in your repository. In -particular, it will keep not only objects referenced by your current set -of branches and tags, but also objects referenced by the index, -remote-tracking branches, refs saved by 'git filter-branch' in -refs/original/, reflogs (which may reference commits in branches -that were later amended or rewound), and anything else in the refs/* namespace. -If you are expecting some objects to be deleted and they aren't, check -all of those locations and decide whether it makes sense in your case to -remove those references. +anywhere in your repository. In particular, it will keep not only +objects referenced by your current set of branches and tags, but also +objects referenced by the index, remote-tracking branches, notes saved +by 'git notes' under refs/notes/, reflogs (which may reference commits +in branches that were later amended or rewound), and anything else in +the refs/* namespace. If you are expecting some objects to be deleted +and they aren't, check all of those locations and decide whether it +makes sense in your case to remove those references. On the other hand, when 'git gc' runs concurrently with another process, there is a risk of it deleting an object that the other process is using diff --git a/Documentation/git-merge.txt b/Documentation/git-merge.txt index 01fd52dc70..092529c619 100644 --- a/Documentation/git-merge.txt +++ b/Documentation/git-merge.txt @@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ SYNOPSIS -------- [verse] 'git merge' [-n] [--stat] [--no-commit] [--squash] [--[no-]edit] - [-s ] [-X ] [-S[]] + [--no-verify] [-s ] [-X ] [-S[]] [--[no-]allow-unrelated-histories] [--[no-]rerere-autoupdate] [-m ] [-F ] [...] 'git merge' (--continue | --abort | --quit) diff --git a/Documentation/git-rebase.txt b/Documentation/git-rebase.txt index 6156609cf7..639a4179d1 100644 --- a/Documentation/git-rebase.txt +++ b/Documentation/git-rebase.txt @@ -8,8 +8,8 @@ git-rebase - Reapply commits on top of another base tip SYNOPSIS -------- [verse] -'git rebase' [-i | --interactive] [] [--exec ] [--onto ] - [ []] +'git rebase' [-i | --interactive] [] [--exec ] + [--onto | --keep-base] [ []] 'git rebase' [-i | --interactive] [] [--exec ] [--onto ] --root [] 'git rebase' (--continue | --skip | --abort | --quit | --edit-todo | --show-current-patch) @@ -217,6 +217,24 @@ As a special case, you may use "A\...B" as a shortcut for the merge base of A and B if there is exactly one merge base. You can leave out at most one of A and B, in which case it defaults to HEAD. +--keep-base:: + Set the starting point at which to create the new commits to the + merge base of . Running + 'git rebase --keep-base ' is equivalent to + running 'git rebase --onto ... '. ++ +This option is useful in the case where one is developing a feature on +top of an upstream branch. While the feature is being worked on, the +upstream branch may advance and it may not be the best idea to keep +rebasing on top of the upstream but to keep the base commit as-is. ++ +Although both this option and --fork-point find the merge base between + and , this option uses the merge base as the _starting +point_ on which new commits will be created, whereas --fork-point uses +the merge base to determine the _set of commits_ which will be rebased. ++ +See also INCOMPATIBLE OPTIONS below. + :: Upstream branch to compare against. May be any valid commit, not just an existing branch name. Defaults to the configured @@ -369,6 +387,10 @@ ends up being empty, the will be used as a fallback. + If either or --root is given on the command line, then the default is `--no-fork-point`, otherwise the default is `--fork-point`. ++ +If your branch was based on but was rewound and +your branch contains commits which were dropped, this option can be used +with `--keep-base` in order to drop those commits from your branch. --ignore-whitespace:: --whitespace=