Hello,

I was doing development on a linux box on AWS, when we found a code
bug that had me switching to running the code on a Mac instead. We
discovered that we had accidentally named two files the same when
looked at case-insensitively, which made git commands afterwards
display the wrong thing. It looked like this (ignoring some things
that aren't relevant):

$ git status


   modified:   tests/test_system/show_19_L.txt


no changes added to commit (use "git add" and/or "git commit -a")

$ git checkout tests/test_system/show_19_L.txt

$ git status


   modified:   tests/test_system/show_19_l.txt


no changes added to commit (use "git add" and/or "git commit -a")

$ git checkout tests/test_system/show_19_l.txt

$ git status


   modified:   tests/test_system/show_19_L.txt


no changes added to commit (use "git add" and/or "git commit -a")

$ diff tests/test_system/show_19_L.txt tests/test_system/show_19_l.txt

$


Those two files are different in our repo, and as such git thinks that
we modified one of them when we try and pull it down from github
again.


Thanks for looking at this!
-- Steven

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