On Fri, Mar 11, 2016 at 10:08 AM, Junio C Hamano <gits...@pobox.com> wrote:
> "Pedroso, Osiris" <osiris.pedr...@intergraph.com> writes:
>
>> I participate in an open source project that any pull merge is accepted, no 
>> matter what.
>>
>> This makes for lots of broken builds, even though we do have Travis-CI 
>> enabled on the project, because people will merge a request before even the 
>> build is complete.
>>
>> Therefore, I would like to remember the id of the commit of the last 
>> successful build. This would be updated by the Travis-CI script itself upon 
>> a successful build.
>>
>> I imagine best option would be to merge master to a certain branch named 
>> "Last_known_Linux_build" or "Last_known_Windows_build" or even 
>> "Last_known_build_all_tests_passing".
>>
>> I am new to git, but some other experienced co-volunteers tell me that it 
>> may not be possible due to authentication issues.
>>
>> Any better way of accomplishing this?
>
> "test && git branch -f last-good"?

Travis-CI enabled, tells me they're using Github and are distributed,
so one contributor would want to know the last known good state of
a remote, that others push to, without testing all commits locally.

So maybe the question is better rephrased as: "How do we keep track of
the last good state using the distributed nature of Git?"

I would rather ask the more fundamental question of the workflow
of having everything merged despite tests failing. Also accepting
pull requests no matter what, sounds suspicious to me. (Can I sneak
in security issues or delete all files and it still is pulled?)

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