Eric, are you still investigating this bug? (I note that your reply, which 
cc:ed the list, doesn't seem to have been mailed out to the list, or added to 
mailing list archives.)

On Oct 10, 2013, at 17:13 , Eric Boxer <boxersp...@gmail.com> wrote:

> I'm on it and I'll follow up shortly.
> 
> 
> On Thu, Oct 10, 2013 at 05:46 PM, Dan Fabulich wrote:
>> On case-insensitive filesystems, git-merge deletes files that were 
>> recapitalized in another branch if rename detection fails.
>> 
>> To repro: Run this script with git 1.8.4 on a case-insensitive filesystem. 
>> It repros for me on the default HFS filesystem on OS X 10.8, and also on 
>> Win7 NTFS.
>> 
>> #!/bin/sh -x
>> # create git repo
>> git --version
>> rm -rf caps
>> git init caps
>> cd caps
>> git config --get core.ignorecase
>> # commit empty file called "file"
>> echo file > file
>> git add .
>> git commit -am "initial commit"
>> # create branch called "branch"
>> git branch branch
>> # rename "file" to "File"
>> # using --force per http://stackoverflow.com/questions/6899582
>> git mv --force file File
>> echo "completely different content" > File
>> git commit -am "renamed to File"
>> # switch to branch, make a non-conflicting commit
>> git checkout branch
>> echo newfile > newfile
>> git add .
>> git commit -am "branch commit"
>> # merge master into branch, commit merge
>> git merge --verbose --commit --no-edit master
>> ls File
>> git status
>> 
>> Actual: At the end of the script, the renamed File has been deleted by 
>> git-merge. "ls: File: No such file or directory" According to git-status, 
>> the deletion is not yet staged.
>> 
>> Expected: There should be no untracked changes at the end of this script. 
>> The script runs as expected on Linux or case-sensitive HFS.
>> 
>> -Dan Fabulich
>> 
>> P.S. On case-insensitive HFS, git-init will automatically set 
>> core.ignorecase to true. For the sake of the experiment, I also tried 
>> setting core.ignorecase to false in the test repository.
>> 
>> When I did that, I was unable to even checkout the "branch" branch without 
>> using --force. ("The following untracked working tree files would be 
>> overwritten by checkout: file" But git-status reported no untracked changes.)
>> 
>> And then, once I did use force to switch to the branch, I was unable to 
>> merge from master at all. ("The following untracked working tree files would 
>> be overwritten by merge: File" But again, git-status reported no untracked 
>> changes.)
>> 
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