* Re: $GIT_CONFIG should either apply to all commands, or none at all
2014-10-02 1:15 ` $GIT_CONFIG should either apply to all commands, or none at all Jonathan Nieder
@ 2014-10-02 15:59 ` Jeff King
2014-10-02 17:51 ` Junio C Hamano
1 sibling, 0 replies; 3+ messages in thread
From: Jeff King @ 2014-10-02 15:59 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Jonathan Nieder; +Cc: Frédéric Brière, git
On Wed, Oct 01, 2014 at 06:15:46PM -0700, Jonathan Nieder wrote:
> 3) Warn when 'git config' is called with GIT_CONFIG set, explaining
> that support will eventually be removed and that callers should
> pass --file= instead.
>
> 4) Once we're confident there are no scripts in the wild relying on
> that envvar, remove support for it.
I think you could do just these two without worrying about the
I_AM_PORCELAIN setting. It's completely redundant with `git config
--file` these days.
> Another possibility (B):
>
> 1) Teach git's commands in C to respect the GIT_CONFIG environment
> variable. Semantics: only configuration from that file would be
> respected and all other configuration will be ignored. Advertise
> it in the git(1) manpage.
I think this is a bad idea. It originally _did_ impact each command, but
there were a lot of confusing corner cases to the semantics, and it led
to bugs and misbehavior. That's what led to dc87183. I wish we had just
dropped it for git-config then, too. We kept it for backwards
compatibility, but we probably should have deprecated it more clearly.
> Yet another possibility (C):
>
> 1) Just skip to step (4) from plan (A).
I agree this is tempting. We have never deprecated it formally, but it
has been a little-used feature.
> C is kind of temping. Do you know if there are scripts in the wild
> that rely on the GIT_CONFIG setting working?
Searching here:
https://github.com/search?q=%22export+GIT_CONFIG%22&type=Code
reveals that some people do set it, but from the handful I investigated,
it is probably not doing what they want. For example, in:
https://github.com/GNOME/sysadmin-bin/blob/8ef4165a4b38fd1488c194f0c562c7fe24545bca/git/gnome-post-receive
they are trying to use it as if it affects all git commands, but as we
just discussed, it does not. So their script is potentially buggy as-is.
Getting rid of GIT_CONFIG would make it _more_ buggy, so perhaps that is
not an excuse, but I think it points to actually doing something.
-Peff
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 3+ messages in thread
* Re: $GIT_CONFIG should either apply to all commands, or none at all
2014-10-02 1:15 ` $GIT_CONFIG should either apply to all commands, or none at all Jonathan Nieder
2014-10-02 15:59 ` Jeff King
@ 2014-10-02 17:51 ` Junio C Hamano
1 sibling, 0 replies; 3+ messages in thread
From: Junio C Hamano @ 2014-10-02 17:51 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Jonathan Nieder; +Cc: Frédéric Brière, git, Jeff King
Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com> writes:
> Yep. One possibility would be to do something like the following (A):
>
> 1) advertise in the git-config(1) manpage that the GIT_CONFIG
> environment variable only affects the behavior of the 'git config'
> command
>
> 2) introduce an environment variable GIT_I_AM_PORCELAIN. (If doing
> this, we could come up with a better name, but this is just an
> illustration.) Set and export that envvar in git-sh-setup.sh.
> When that environment variable is set, make git-config stop paying
> attention to GIT_CONFIG.
>
> That way, git commands that happen to be scripts would not be
> affected by the GIT_CONFIG setting any more.
At the places you plan to update porcelains to set and export
GIT_I_AM_PORCELAIN, you could unset GIT_CONFIG if set. Would that
achieve the same goal?
And you can stop there without doing 3 or 4, no?
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 3+ messages in thread