"Johannes Schindelin via GitGitGadget" <[email protected]>
writes:
> diff --git a/builtin/init-db.c b/builtin/init-db.c
> index 93eff7618c..94df241ad5 100644
> --- a/builtin/init-db.c
> +++ b/builtin/init-db.c
> @@ -155,6 +155,9 @@ static int git_init_db_config(const char *k, const char
> *v, void *cb)
> if (!strcmp(k, "init.templatedir"))
> return git_config_pathname(&init_db_template_dir, k, v);
>
> + if (starts_with(k, "core."))
> + return platform_core_config(k, v, cb);
> +
> return 0;
> }
OK. I think this is very much futureproof and a sensible thing to
have a "platform_core_config()" call here. That way, we do not have
to say the details of what platform specific thing each platform
wants when init_db_config works.
> @@ -361,6 +364,9 @@ int init_db(const char *git_dir, const char *real_git_dir,
> }
> startup_info->have_repository = 1;
>
> + /* Just look for `init.templatedir` and `core.hidedotfiles` */
And from that point of view, replacing `core.hidedotfiles` with
something like "platform specific core config" would be more
appropriate.
> + git_config(git_init_db_config, NULL);
> +
We use git_init_db_config from create_default_files(), which is a
function called several lines after this point; shouldn't that now
be removed from create_default_files()?
> safe_create_dir(git_dir, 0);
>
> init_is_bare_repository = is_bare_repository();
> diff --git a/t/t0001-init.sh b/t/t0001-init.sh
> index 42a263cada..35ede1b0b0 100755
> --- a/t/t0001-init.sh
> +++ b/t/t0001-init.sh
> @@ -453,6 +453,18 @@ test_expect_success 're-init from a linked worktree' '
> )
> '
>
> +test_expect_success MINGW 'core.hidedotfiles = false' '
> + git config --global core.hidedotfiles false &&
> + rm -rf newdir &&
> + (
> + sane_unset GIT_DIR GIT_WORK_TREE GIT_CONFIG &&
> + mkdir newdir &&
> + cd newdir &&
> + git init
> + ) &&
This is not incorrect per-se, but I think most tests do the mkdir
outside subshell, i.e.
rm -rf newdir &&
mkdir newdir &&
(
cd newdir &&
sane_unset ... &&
...
) &&
Other than these, I find nothing questionable in the patch. Nicely
done.