On Tue, Feb 14, 2017 at 11:19:05PM -0600, Edmundo Carmona Antoranz wrote:

> I've been working on detecting revisions where a "real" deletion was
> made and I think I advanced a lot in that front. I still have to work
> on many scenarios (renamed files, for example... also performance) but
> at least I'm using a few runs against git-scm history and the results
> are "promising":

I played with this a bit more, and it did turn up the correct results
for some deletions in my experiments.

One thing I noticed is that it also turned up nonsense for lines that
blame in weird ways. For instance, I have a diff like this (these are
real examples, but don't pay attention to the sha1s; it's in a fork of
git, not upstream):

  $ git diff v2.6.5 builtin/prune-packed.c
  diff --git a/builtin/prune-packed.c b/builtin/prune-packed.c
  index 7cf900ea07..5e3727e841 100644
  --- a/builtin/prune-packed.c
  +++ b/builtin/prune-packed.c
  @@ -2,6 +2,7 @@
   #include "cache.h"
   #include "progress.h"
   #include "parse-options.h"
  +#include "gh-log.h"
   
   static const char * const prune_packed_usage[] = {
        N_("git prune-packed [-n | --dry-run] [-q | --quiet]"),
  @@ -29,8 +30,11 @@ static int prune_object(const unsigned char *sha1, const 
char *path,
   
        if (*opts & PRUNE_PACKED_DRY_RUN)
                printf("rm -f %s\n", path);
  -     else
  +     else {
  +             gh_logf("prune", "%s Duplicate loose object pruned\n",
  +                     sha1_to_hex(sha1));
                unlink_or_warn(path);
  +     }
        return 0;
   }
   

Running difflame on it says this:

  $ python /path/to/difflame.py v2.6.5..HEAD -- builtin/prune-packed.c
  [...]
  -2c0b29e662 (Jeff King 2016-01-26 15:27:55 -0500 32)  else
  +d60032f8640 builtin/prune-packed.c (Jeff King        2015-02-02 23:15:33 
-0500 33)   else {
  +d60032f8640 builtin/prune-packed.c (Jeff King        2015-02-02 23:15:33 
-0500 34)           gh_logf("prune", "%s Duplicate loose object pruned\n",
  +d60032f8640 builtin/prune-packed.c (Jeff King        2015-02-02 23:15:33 
-0500 35)                   sha1_to_hex(sha1));
   0d3b729680e builtin/prune-packed.c (Jeff King        2014-10-15 18:40:53 
-0400 36)           unlink_or_warn(path);
  +2396ec85bd1 prune-packed.c         (Linus Torvalds   2005-07-03 14:27:34 
-0700 37)   }

There are two weird things. One is that the old "else" is attributed to
my 2c0b29e662. That's quite weird, because that is a merge commit which
did not touch the file at all. I haven't tracked it down, but presumably
that is weirdness with the --reverse blame.

But there's another one, that I think is easy to fix. The closing brace
is attributed to some ancient commit from Linus. Which yes, I'm sure had
a closing brace, but not _my_ closing brace that was added by
d60032f8640, that the rest of the lines got attributed to.

This isn't difflame's fault; that's what "git blame" tells you about
that line. But since I already told difflame "v2.6.5..HEAD", it would
probably make sense to similarly limit the blame to that range. That
turns up a boundary commit for the line. Which is _also_ not helpful,
but at least the tool is telling me that the line came from before
v2.6.5, and I don't really need to care much about it.

Part of this is that my use case may be a bit different than yours. I
don't actually want to look at the blame results directly. I just want
to see the set of commits that I'd need to look at and possibly
cherry-pick in order to re-create the diff.

-Peff

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