Am 02.04.2018 um 02:36 schrieb Robert Dailey:
I'm struggling with a bug that I found introduced in git v2.13.2. The
bug was not reproducible in v2.13.1. The issue is that using arguments
like "@{-1}" to aliases causes those curly braces to be removed, so
once the command is executed after alias processing the argument looks
like "@-1". This breaks any aliases you have that wrap `git log` and
such. I originally opened the bug on the Git for Windows project
(since I use Git mostly on Windows):

https://github.com/git-for-windows/git/issues/1220
...
Here is the alias being used for a test:

[alias]
     lgtest = !git log --oneline \"$@\"

And here is the command I invoke for the test:

$ git lgtest @{-1}

I should get logs for the previously-checked-out branch.

When `prepare_shell_cmd()` is called in run-command.c, it gets expanded like so:

+ [0] "sh" const char *
+ [1] "-c" const char *
+ [2] "git log --oneline \"$@\" \"$@\"" const char *
+ [3] "git log --oneline \"$@\"" const char *
+ [4] "@{-1}" const char *

With my modifications (again, patch inline below) I get this:

+ [0] "sh" const char *
+ [1] "-c" const char *
+ [2] "git log --oneline \"$@\"" const char *
+ [3] "@{-1}" const char *

The second version looks much better.

But this is wrong. Try this on the command line:

  sh -c 'echo "$@"' a b c

Notice how this prints only 'b c', not 'a b c'. The reason is that the argument 'a' is treated like a "script" name, i.e. what you get for "$0", and 'b' and 'c' as the actual arguments to the "script".

That is, you must fill in some dummy "script" name at slot [3], and run_command chooses to put the alias text there.

I think the constant nesting of
commands inside each other that the first version does is somehow
causing curly braces to be removed. I don't understand enough about
shell processing to know why it would do this.

Some shells expand the curly braces. They must get lost somewhere by one of the two shell invocations that happen on the way.

BTW, you don't happen to have a file named '@-1' in your directory, most likely by accident?

-- Hannes

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