On 2015-07-17 10:50, li...@haller-berlin.de wrote:
Junio C Hamano <gits...@pobox.com> wrote:

Beat Bolli <dev+...@drbeat.li> writes:

> When referring to earlier commits in commit messages or other text, one
> of the established formats is
>
>     <abbrev-sha> ("<summary>", <author-date>)
> ...
> +proc copysummary {} {
> +    global rowmenuid commitinfo
> +
> +    set id [string range $rowmenuid 0 7]
> +    set info $commitinfo($rowmenuid)
> +    set commit [lindex $info 0]

7 hexdigits is not always an appropriate value for all projects.
The minimum necessary to guarantee uniqueness varies on project, and
it is not a good idea to hardcode such a small value.  Not-so-old
Linux kernel history seems to use at least 12, for example.

I believe that the "one of the established formats" comes from a
"git one" alias I published somewhere long time ago, that did
something like this:

  git show -s --abbrev=8 --pretty='format:%h (%s, %ai' "$@" |
sed -e 's/ [012][0-9]:[0-5][0-9]:[0-5][0-9] [-+][0-9][0-9][0-9][0-9]$/)/'

where the combination of --abbrev=8 and format:%h asks for a unique
abbreviation that is at least 8 hexdigits long but can use more than
8 if it is not long enough to uniquely identify the given commit.

For the intended use case of this feature (referring to earlier commits
in commit messages), guaranteeing uniqueness isn't sufficiant either.
What is unique at the time of creating the commit might no longer be
unique a few years later.

This is true, but the purpose of the format with the summary text and date is exactly to make it redundant enough that the hash doesn't have to be unique
in eternity.

So one strategy would be to add one or two digits to what %h returns, to
give some future leeway; or rely on the user to configure core.abbrev
appropriatly for their project; or just make the hard-coded value
configurable, as Hannes suggests.

FWIW, a discussion of this that I find useful can be found here:
<http://blog.cuviper.com/2013/11/10/how-short-can-git-abbreviate/>.
--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe git" in
the body of a message to majord...@vger.kernel.org
More majordomo info at  http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html

Reply via email to