On Wed, Aug 23, 2017 at 21:43:15 +0200, Torsten Bögershausen wrote:
> git reset does it's job - please see below.
> 
> The problem is that we need a "git commit" here.
> After applying .gitattributes, it may be neccessary to "normalize" the
> files. If there is something in the documentation, that can be
> improved, please let us know.

I'll have a patch up shortly.

> On Tue, Aug 22, 2017 at 03:44:41PM -0400, Ben Boeckel wrote:
> > The fact that plumbing is necessary to dig yourself out of a hole of the
> > `eol` attribute changes points to something needing to be changed, even
> > if it's only documentation. Could Git detect this and message about it
> > somehow when `git reset` cannot fix the working tree?
> 
> The thing is, that the working tree is "in a good state":
> We want "dos" with CRLF, and that is what we have.
> There is nothing that can be improved in the working tree.
> What needs to be fixed, is the index. And that needs to be done with
> "git add" "git commit."
> As Junio pointed out, the read-tree is not ideal
> (to fix a single file in a possible dirty working tree)
> 
> In your case it looks like this:
> 
>     echo "dos eol=crlf" > .gitattributes
>     git add .gitattributes &&
>     git rm --cached dos && git add dos &&
>     git commit

In this case, just adding the file should work: the file is on-disk as
intended and adding the file should normalize the line endings when
adding it into the index (basically, just `git add dos` should be
required to make the index look like it should).

> > Or maybe it could at least exit with failure instead of success?
> 
> I don't know.
> It -may- be possible to add a warning in "git reset".
> I can have a look at that...

Thanks.

--Ben

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