Thanks for looking into this.

I was able to reproduce it from scratch, but I followed my earlier
workflow where I first created the subrepos, and then later renamed
it. At the time I was not able to find any command to rename without
changing the path (and I was not able find one now either, is there
any?), so I edited name and path in .gitmodules and ran git submodule
sync. Am I asking for trouble doing it that way?

Let me know if you need the exact steps I followed.

Andreas


On 19 December 2017 at 23:33, Stefan Beller <sbel...@google.com> wrote:
> On Tue, Dec 19, 2017 at 2:19 PM, Junio C Hamano <gits...@pobox.com> wrote:
>> Stefan Beller <sbel...@google.com> writes:
>>
>>> I tried reproducing the issue (based on the `next` branch, not 2.15,
>>> but I do not recall any changes in the submodule area lately), and
>>> could not come up with a reproduction recipe,...
>>
>> I do not offhand recall anything; the closest I can think of is the
>> three-patch series <20171016135623.ga12...@book.hvoigt.net> that
>> taught the on-demand recursive fetch to pay attention to the location
>> in the superproject tree a submodule is bound to.
>
> I tried the same test on 2.15 and cannot reproduce there either.
>
>>
>>     4b4acedd61 submodule: simplify decision tree whether to or not to fetch
>>     c68f837576 implement fetching of moved submodules
>>     01ce12252c fetch: add test to make sure we stay backwards compatible
>>
>> But IIRC, "submodule update" uses a separate codepath?
>
> Yes, any portion of git-submodule.sh that calls out to C is going
> through the submodule--helper. I want to revive the port of that
> shell script to C again.
>
> The "submodule update" uses the submodule helper to obtain
> the list of submodules and then does a "git -C $sub fetch" in there.
>
> Stefan

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