On 11/14/2016 10:56 AM, Junio C Hamano wrote:
Jonathan Tan <[email protected]> writes:

to:
HEAD:file
HEAD:sub/file

Signed-off-by: Brandon Williams <[email protected]>
---

Unrelated tangent, but this makes readers wonder what the updated
trailer code would do to the last paragraph ;-).  Does it behave
sensibly (with some sane definition of sensibleness)?

I am guessing that it would, because neither To: or HEAD: is what we
normally recognize as a known trailer block element.

Yes, it behaves sensibly :-) because "Signed-off-by:" is preceded by a
blank line, so the trailer block consists only of that line.

Oh, that was not what I was wondering.  Imagine Brandon writing his
message that ends in these three questionable lines and then running
"commit -s --amend" to add his sign-off---that was the case I was
wondering.

Ah, I see. In that case, it would consider the last block as a trailer block and attach it directly:

  to:
  HEAD:file
  HEAD:sub/file
  Signed-off-by: ...

It is true that neither to: nor HEAD: are known trailers, but my patch set accepts trailer blocks that are 100% well-formed regardless of whether the trailers are known (to provide backwards compatibility with git-interpret-trailers, and to satisfy the certain use cases that I brought up). The "known trailer" check is used when the trailer block is not 100% well-formed.

This issue can be avoided if those lines were indented with at least one space or at least one tab.

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