From: Domagoj Stolfa <domagoj.stolfa@gmail.com>
To: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Cc: Git Mailing List <git@vger.kernel.org>
Subject: Re: Possible git blame bug?
Date: Tue, 14 Mar 2017 00:08:10 +0100 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <20170313230810.GA80865@workstation> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <xmqqfuign7jw.fsf@gitster.mtv.corp.google.com>
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Hello,
> > For example, saying:
> >
> > $ git blame time.h --since=2017
> > ^e19f2a27ed8 (Domagoj Stolfa 2017-03-12 20:43:01 +0100 33) #ifndef _SYS_TIME_H_
> >
> > $ git blame time.h --since=2016
> > ^21613a57af9 (bz 2016-03-13 21:26:18 +0000 33) #ifndef _SYS_TIME_H_
> >
> > $ git blame time.h --since=2015
> > ^48507f436f0 (mav 2015-03-13 21:01:25 +0000 33) #ifndef _SYS_TIME_H_
> >
> > and so on, with different hashes.
>
> The output lines "^deadbeef" does *NOT* mean that commit deadbeef
> changed the revision. It just is telling you that the hisory was
> dug down to that revision and it was found that since that revision
> there is no change (and you told the command not to bother looking
> beyond that time range, so we do not know what happened before that
> time).
>
> It is understandable, when your history has a lot of merges, the
> history traversal may stop at commits on different branches.
>
> Imagine a case where the line in question never changed throughout
> the history:
>
> o---o---B
> / \
> O---o---o---A---C---o---o
>
> Imagine A is from 2015, B is from 2016 and C is from 2017. C's
> first parent, i.e. C^1, is A and C^2 is B.
>
> If you ask the command to stop digging when you hit a commit on or
> before 2017-03-13 (03-13 is because today's date is appended to your
> 2017), your traversal will stop at C and you get a line that begins
> with ^C.
>
> If you ask it to stop at 2016, A won't be even looked at because it
> is older. The command will keep digging from C to find B. If B's
> parent is also newer than the cutoff, but its parent is older, then
> the line will be shown with ^ and commit object name of B's parent.
>
> If you ask it to stop at 2015, the command will first consider A
> (C's earlier parent) and pass blame to the lines common between
> these two commits. In this illustration, we are pretending that the
> file did not change throughout the hsitory, so blame for all lines
> are passed to A and we don't even look at B. Then we keep digging
> through A to find the culprit, or hit a commit older than the
> specified cut-off time. The line will be shown with ^A or perhaps
> its ancestor.
>
> So it is entirely sane if you saw three boundary commits named with
> three different time ranges.
Thanks for clearing this up. Is this documented somewhere, so that if it happens
again I can point people to the docs that explain this behaviour?
--
Best regards,
Domagoj Stolfa
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next prev parent reply other threads:[~2017-03-13 23:08 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 10+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2017-03-13 20:11 Possible git blame bug? Domagoj Stolfa
2017-03-13 20:38 ` Junio C Hamano
[not found] ` <20170313204401.GB80633@workstation>
2017-03-13 20:46 ` Domagoj Stolfa
2017-03-13 21:29 ` Junio C Hamano
2017-03-13 21:44 ` Domagoj Stolfa
2017-03-13 22:19 ` Junio C Hamano
2017-03-13 22:46 ` Junio C Hamano
2017-03-13 23:08 ` Domagoj Stolfa [this message]
2017-03-13 23:15 ` Junio C Hamano
2017-03-13 23:19 ` Domagoj Stolfa
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