Steffen Prohaska <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On Jan 8, 2008, at 8:47 PM, Junio C Hamano wrote:
>>
>> "J. Bruce Fields" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>>
>>> My only suggestion is that we consider allowing the user that
>>> "explicitly told git to do so" be the project maintainer. So if you
>>>
>>> echo * autodetectcrlf >.gitattributes
>>> git add .gitattributes
>>> git commit
>>>
>>> then users that clone your repo will get that default without
>>> having to
>>> be told to do something magic on clone.
>>>
>>> (And ideally I'd've hoped you could do that using the existing crlf
>>> attribute rather than having to invent something new, but maybe that
>>> doesn't work.)
>>
>> I think the project can mark text files as text with attributes
>> and if the port to the platform initialized core.autocrlf
>> appropriately for the platform everything should work as you
>> described.
>>
>> At least that is how I read the description of `crlf` in
>> gitattributes(5).
>
>
> But we do not want to mark a file as text but tell git to run its
> auto-detection and use the local default line endings.
My reading of the description of `crlf` in gitattributes(5) is:
`crlf`
^^^^^^
This attribute controls the line-ending convention.
Set::
Setting the `crlf` attribute on a path is meant to mark
the path as a "text" file. 'core.autocrlf' conversion
takes place without guessing the content type by
inspection.
Notice "without guessing".