"git rev-parse --parseopt" shows the short help with its description of
all recognized options twice: When called with -h or --help, and after
reporting an unknown option. Move the one for optionspec into a file
and use it in two tests to deduplicate that part.
"git rev-parse --parseopt -- --h" wraps the help text in "cat <<\EOF"
and "EOF". Keep that part in the file to use it as is in the test that
needs it and simply remove it in the other one using sed.
Disable whitespace checking for the file using an attribute, as we need
to keep its spaces intact and wouldn't want a stray --whitespace=fix
turn them into tabs.
Signed-off-by: René Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
"git rev-parse --parseopt" handles the built-in options -h and --help,
but not --no-help. Make test definitions and documentation examples
more realistic by disabling negation.
Signed-off-by: René Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
"git subtree" only handles the negated variant of the options annotate,
prefix, onto, rejoin, ignore-joins and squash explicitly. help is
handled by "git rev-parse --parseopt" implicitly, but not its negated
form. Disable negation for it and the for the rest of the options to
get a helpful error message when trying them.
Signed-off-by: René Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
"git branch -f X" to repoint the branch X said that X was "checked
out" in another worktree, even when branch X was not and instead
being bisected or rebased. The message was reworded to say the
branch was "in use".
* jc/branch-in-use-error-message:
branch: update the message to refuse touching a branch in-use
"git blame --contents=file" has been taught to work in a bare
repository.
* hy/blame-in-bare-with-contents:
blame: allow --contents to work with bare repo
Command line parser fix, and a small parse-options API update.
* jc/parse-options-short-help:
short help: allow a gap smaller than USAGE_GAP
remote: simplify "remote add --tags" help text
short help: allow multi-line opthelp
Clarify how to pick a starting point for a new topic in the
SubmittingPatches document.
* la/doc-choose-starting-point-fixup:
SubmittingPatches: use of older maintenance tracks is an exception
SubmittingPatches: explain why 'next' and above are inappropriate base
SubmittingPatches: choice of base for fixing an older maintenance track
Rewrite the description of giving a custom command to the
submodule.<name>.update configuration variable.
* pv/doc-submodule-update-settings:
doc: highlight that .gitmodules does not support !command
Fix tests with unportable regex patterns.
* ja/worktree-orphan-fix:
t2400: rewrite regex to avoid unintentional PCRE
builtin/worktree.c: convert tab in advice to space
t2400: drop no-op `--sq` from rev-parse call
The implementation of "get_sha1_hex()" that reads a hexadecimal
string that spells a full object name has been extended to cope
with any hash function used in the repository, but the "sha1" in
its name survived. Rename it to get_hash_hex(), a name that is
more consistent within its friends like get_hash_hex_algop().
* jc/retire-get-sha1-hex:
hex: retire get_sha1_hex()
Clarify how to choose the starting point for a new topic in
developer guidance document.
* la/doc-choose-starting-point:
SubmittingPatches: simplify guidance for choosing a starting point
SubmittingPatches: emphasize need to communicate non-default starting points
SubmittingPatches: de-emphasize branches as starting points
SubmittingPatches: discuss subsystems separately from git.git
SubmittingPatches: reword awkward phrasing
Fix a typo introduced in aa9166bcc0 (The ninth batch, 2023-07-08).
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
"git branch --list --format=<format>" and friends are taught
a new "%(describe)" placeholder.
* ks/ref-filter-describe:
ref-filter: add new "describe" atom
ref-filter: add multiple-option parsing functions
When the user edits "rebase -i" todo file so that it starts with a
"fixup", which would make it invalid, the command truncated the
rest of the file before giving an error and returning the control
back to the user. Stop truncating to make it easier to correct
such a malformed todo file.
* ah/sequencer-rewrite-todo-fix:
sequencer: finish parsing the todo list despite an invalid first line
Instead of inventing a custom counter variables for debugging,
use existing trace2 facility in the fsync customization codepath.
* bb/use-trace2-counters-for-fsync-stats:
wrapper: use trace2 counters to collect fsync stats
"./configure --with-expat=no" did not work as a way to refuse use
of the expat library on a system with the library installed, which
has been corrected.
* ah/autoconf-fixes:
configure.ac: always save NO_ICONV to config.status
configure.ac: don't overwrite NO_CURL option
configure.ac: don't overwrite NO_EXPAT option
Code simplification.
* jc/tree-walk-drop-base-offset:
tree-walk: drop unused base_offset from do_match()
tree-walk: lose base_offset that is never used in tree_entry_interesting
Finding mistakes in and improving your own patches is a good idea,
but doing so too quickly is being inconsiderate to reviewers who
have just seen the initial iteration and taking their time to review
it. Encourage new developers to perform such a self review before
they send out their patches, not after. After sending a patch that
they immediately found mistakes in, they are welcome to comment on
them, mentioning what and how they plan to improve them in an
updated version, before sending out their updates.
Helped-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Helped-by: Linus Arver <linusa@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Command line parser fixes.
* jc/parse-options-show-branch:
show-branch: reject --[no-](topo|date)-order
show-branch: --no-sparse should give dense output
While we could technically fix each and every bug on top of the
commit that introduced it, it is not necessarily practical. For
trivial and low-value bugfixes, it often is simpler and sufficient
to just fix it in the current maintenance track, leaving the bug
unfixed in the older maintenance tracks.
Demote the "use older maintenance track to fix old bugs" as a side
note, and explain that the choice is used only in exceptional cases.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The 'next' branch is primarily meant to be a testing ground to make
sure that topics that are reasonably well done work well together.
Building a new work on it would mean everything that was already in
'next' must have graduated to 'master' before the new work can also
be merged to 'master', and that is why we do not encourage basing
new work on 'next'.
Helped-by: Linus Arver <linusa@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Replace all cases of `\s` with ` ` as it is not part of POSIX BRE or ERE
and therefore not all versions of grep handle it.
For the same reason all cases of `\S` are replaced with `[^ ]`. It is
not an exact replacement but it is close enough for this use case.
Also, do not write `\+` in BRE and expect it to mean 1 or more;
it is a GNU extension that may not work everywhere.
Remove `.*` from the end of a pattern that is not right-anchored.
Signed-off-by: Jacob Abel <jacobabel@nullpo.dev>
Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When working on an high-value bugfix that must be given to ancient
maintenance tracks, a starting point that is older than `maint` may
have to be chosen.
Helped-by: Linus Arver <linusa@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Bugfix for fc01a5d2 (submodule update documentation: don't repeat
ourselves, 2016-12-27).
The `custom command` and `none` options are described as sharing the
same limitations, but one is allowed in .gitmodules and the other is
not.
Rewrite the description for custom commands to be more precise,
and make it easier for readers to notice that custom commands cannot
be used in the .gitmodules file.
Signed-off-by: Petar Vutov <pvutov@imap.cc>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
"git tag --list --points-at X" showed tags that directly refers to
object X, but did not list a tag that points at such a tag, which
has been corrected.
* jk/nested-points-at:
ref-filter: simplify return type of match_points_at
ref-filter: avoid parsing non-tags in match_points_at()
ref-filter: avoid parsing tagged objects in match_points_at()
ref-filter: handle nested tags in --points-at option
Mark-up unused parameters in the code so that we can eventually
enable -Wunused-parameter by default.
* jk/unused-parameter:
t/helper: mark unused callback void data parameters
tag: mark unused parameters in each_tag_name_fn callbacks
rev-parse: mark unused parameter in for_each_abbrev callback
replace: mark unused parameter in each_mergetag_fn callback
replace: mark unused parameter in ref callback
merge-tree: mark unused parameter in traverse callback
fsck: mark unused parameters in various fsck callbacks
revisions: drop unused "opt" parameter in "tweak" callbacks
count-objects: mark unused parameter in alternates callback
am: mark unused keep_cr parameters
http-push: mark unused parameter in xml callback
http: mark unused parameters in curl callbacks
do_for_each_ref_helper(): mark unused repository parameter
test-ref-store: drop unimplemented reflog-expire command
Names of MinGW header files are spelled in mixed case in some
source files, but the build host can be using case sensitive
filesystem with header files with their name spelled in all
lowercase.
* mh/mingw-case-sensitive-build:
mingw: use lowercase includes for some Windows headers