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From: Steven Grimm <koreth@midwinter.com>
To: Andy Parkins <andyparkins@gmail.com>
Cc: git@vger.kernel.org, John Goerzen <jgoerzen@complete.org>
Subject: Re: Rename handling
Date: Mon, 19 Mar 2007 12:21:22 -0700	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <45FEE2B2.6050904@midwinter.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <200703191903.20005.andyparkins@gmail.com>

Andy Parkins wrote:
> It's not really a guess; through the magic of sha-1, and provided you 
> are disciplined enough to commit the rename without any changes to the 
> content you can be sure that the rename is tracked.  The sha-1 /must/ 
> be the same before and after.  For this 100% case, git doesn't even 
> need the "-M", git-blame, git-diff and git-merge will find it anyway.
>   

I said as much in my mail. The problem is that "commit the rename 
without any changes to the content" is synonymous in many cases with 
"commit a revision that fails to compile." Which may or may not be 
acceptable in some environments but is, to me at least, a sign that 
something is inadequate in the version control system. I shouldn't be 
forced to have a broken build in my revision history just to be 100% 
certain my rename will be tracked accurately.

> The only command I've found that doesn't do the "right thing" by default 
> is git-log and I think that once the following works, all the "why 
> doesn't git track renames" people will go quietly away:
>
>  $ git init
>  $ date > file1
>  $ git add file1
>  $ git commit -m ""
>  $ git mv file1 file2
>  $ git commit -m ""
>  $ git mv file2 file3
>  $ git commit -m ""
>  $ git log -- file3
>   

The following is actually my biggest beef with git's rename tracking, 
and it has nothing whatsoever to do with git-log (though I agree git-log 
needs to track renames too):

$ ls
dir1
$ ls dir1
file1 file2 file3
$ echo "#include file1" > dir1/file4
$ git add dir1/file4
$ git commit
$ git pull
$ ls
dir1 dir2
$ ls dir1
file4
$ ls dir2
file1 file2 file3

That's just plain broken in my opinion. One can perhaps contrive a test 
case or two where that's the desired behavior, but in the real world it 
is almost never what you actually want.

By the way, I don't think fixing that is necessarily related to how 
renames get detected, so in some sense it's a different bug report / 
feature request than the rename hints one. It would be possible to 
figure out the directory had been renamed based purely on content 
analysis; a bunch of files all individually renamed to the same places 
under a new directory, and a lack of any files at all left in the old 
one, probably means the directory got renamed. The content-based rename 
detector could handle this case.

-Steve

  reply	other threads:[~2007-03-19 19:21 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 31+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
2007-03-19 16:10 Rename handling John Goerzen
2007-03-19 18:14 ` Steven Grimm
2007-03-19 18:35   ` Nicolas Pitre
2007-03-19 18:48     ` Linus Torvalds
2007-03-19 19:57       ` Steven Grimm
2007-03-19 20:19         ` Martin Langhoff
2007-03-20  8:33           ` Junio C Hamano
2007-03-19 20:22         ` Linus Torvalds
2007-03-19 20:02       ` Robin Rosenberg
2007-03-19 20:34         ` Linus Torvalds
2007-03-19 19:36     ` Steven Grimm
2007-03-19 19:45       ` Steven Grimm
2007-03-19 20:07         ` Linus Torvalds
2007-03-19 20:17       ` Nicolas Pitre
2007-03-19 20:44       ` Daniel Barkalow
2007-03-19 19:03   ` Andy Parkins
2007-03-19 19:21     ` Steven Grimm [this message]
2007-03-21  0:06       ` Jakub Narebski
2007-03-21  0:25         ` Johannes Schindelin
2007-03-21 22:28           ` Steven Grimm
2007-03-21 23:01             ` Johannes Schindelin
2007-03-21 23:10               ` Linus Torvalds
2007-03-22  0:10             ` Martin Langhoff
2007-03-22  2:01               ` Jakub Narebski
2007-03-22  2:39                 ` Martin Langhoff
2007-03-22  3:32                   ` Jakub Narebski
2007-03-22  3:53                     ` Linus Torvalds
2007-03-19 19:15   ` Daniel Barkalow
2007-03-19 19:49   ` John Goerzen
2007-03-19 22:27     ` Junio C Hamano
2007-03-21  0:21 ` Jakub Narebski

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