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t6425 was very picky about the exact output message produced by a rename/delete conflict, in a way that just scratches the surface of the mess that was built into merge-recursive. The idea was that it would try to find the possible combinations of different conflict types, and when more than one was present for one path, it would try to provide a combined message that covered all the cases. There's a lot to unravel here... First, there's a basic conflict type known as modify/delete, which is a content conflict. It occurs when one side deletes a file, but the other modifies it. There is also a path conflict known as a rename/delete. This occurs when one side deletes a path, and the other renames it. This is not a content conflict, it is a path conflict. It will often occur in combination with a content conflict, though, namely a modify/delete. As such, these two were often combined. Another type of conflict that can exist is a directory/file conflict. For example, one side adds a new file at some path, and the other side of history adds a directory at the same path. The path that was "added" could have been put there by a rename, though. Thus, we have the possibility of a single path being affected by a modify/delete, a rename/delete, and a directory/file conflict. In part, this was a natural by-product of merge-recursive's design. Since it was doing a four way merge with the contents of the working tree being the fourth factor it had to consider, it had working tree handling spread all over the code. It also had directory/file conflict handling spread everywhere through all the other types of conflicts. And our testsuite has a huge number of directory/file conflict tests because trying to get them right required modifying so many different codepaths. A natural outgrowth of this kind of structure is conflict messages that combine all the different types that the current codepath is considering. However, if we want to make the different conflict types orthogonal and avoid repeating ourselves and getting very brittle code, then we need to split the messages from these different conflict types apart. Besides, trying to determine all possible permutations is a _royal_ mess. The code to handle the rename/delete/directory/file conflict output is already somewhat hard to parse, and is somewhat brittle. But if we really wanted to go that route, then we'd have to have special handling for the following types of combinations: * rename/add/delete: on side of history that didn't rename the given file, remove the file instead and place an unrelated file in the way of the rename * rename/rename(2to1)/mode conflict/delete/delete: two different files, one executable and the other not, are renamed to the same location, each side deletes the source file that the other side renames * rename/rename(1to2)/add/add: file renamed differently on each side of history, with each side placing an unrelated file in the way of the other * rename/rename(1to2)/content conflict/file location/(D/F)/(D/F)/: both sides modify a file in conflicting way, both rename that file but to different paths, one side renames the directory which the other side had renamed that file into causing it to possibly need a transitive rename, and each side puts a directory in the way of the other's path. Let's back away from this path of insanity, and allow the different types of conflicts to be handled by separate pieces of non-repeated code by allowing the conflict messages to be split into their separate types. (If multiple conflict types affect a single path, the conflict messages can be printed sequentially.) Start this path with a simple change: modify this test to be more flexible and accept the output either merge backend (recursive or the new ort) will produce. Signed-off-by: Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
24 lines
558 B
Bash
Executable file
24 lines
558 B
Bash
Executable file
#!/bin/sh
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test_description='Merge-recursive rename/delete conflict message'
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. ./test-lib.sh
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test_expect_success 'rename/delete' '
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echo foo >A &&
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git add A &&
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git commit -m "initial" &&
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git checkout -b rename &&
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git mv A B &&
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git commit -m "rename" &&
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git checkout master &&
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git rm A &&
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git commit -m "delete" &&
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test_must_fail git merge --strategy=recursive rename >output &&
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test_i18ngrep "CONFLICT (rename/delete): A.* renamed .*to B.* in rename" output &&
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test_i18ngrep "CONFLICT (rename/delete): A.*deleted in HEAD." output
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'
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test_done
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