On Thu, Jul 28, 2016 at 03:14:48PM -0700, Junio C Hamano wrote:

> > I think the original reason I did not make "--from" the default is that
> > I was worried about breaking consumers which do not know how to handle
> > in-body headers.
> 
> That's a fair concern.
> 
> So going back to Josh's original problem description:
> 
>     While git-send-email knows how to change the patch mails to use your own
>     address as "From:" and add a "From:" line to the body for the author,
>     any other tool used to send emails doesn't do that.
> 
> I wonder how these "any other tool" (that reads the format-patch
> output, i.e. mbox file with one mail per file each, and sends each
> as a piece of e-mail, without paying attention who you, the tool's
> user, are and blindly send them with the original "From:" and other
> headers intact in the header part of the message) are used in the
> wild to send patch submissions.  /usr/bin/mail or /usr/bin/Mail
> would not be among them, as I suspect they would place everything in
> the body part, and the would do so without stripping the "From "
> line that exists before each e-mail message.

I cannot speak for everybody, of course, but the reason I implemented
"--from" is because my workflow is basically:

  git format-patch --from --stdout @{u}..HEAD >mbox
  mutt -f mbox

and then I use mutt's "resend" command to send each one. Mutt uses the
"From" header written by format-patch as the default (and so I would
have to manually move the headers around if not for "--from").

The commands above are wrapped in a script, so I have no problem
remembering to type "--from", but I can see how it would be irritating
for general use. I would go so far as to say that any time the patches
are going to be mailed, that "--from" is the right thing to do (because
otherwise you are relying on your MUA to avoid impersonating the
original author).

The question in my mind is whether people actually use format-patch for
things besides emailing, and if the final destination is something other
than "git am".  It is a handy format because it is the least-lossy way
to move commits around external to git itself.  That's why "rebase" used
it originally. If the final destination is "am" (as it is for rebase),
then in-body headers are OK, because we know it understands those. If
not, then it's a regression.

I think on the whole that defaulting to "--from" would help more people
than hurt them, but if we do believe there are scripts that would be
regressed, it probably needs a deprecation period.

-Peff
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