I hit an issue in Git today that seemed to be a bug. Basically what
happened is in our master branch we had two files, one named something
like "file_NAME.png" and another named "file_name.png" in the same
folder. In the develop branch in the same repo we had removed the
"file_NAME.png" file so
Ryan Anderson wrote:
Git falls into the category of distributed source code management tools,
similar to Arch or Darcs (or, in the commercial world, BitKeeper). This
means that every working directory is a full-fledged repository with
full revision tracking capabilities.
That's not actually
Eric W. Biederman wrote:
Linus Torvalds [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
That said, I really think the dumb protocols are useless anyway. No other
system supports pure static object pulling anyway, and as far as I'm
concerned, I want rsync to kind of work (but it won't be optimal, since
re-packing
Chris Wright wrote:
Here's a simple spec file to do rpm builds.
(snip)
Creates a package named git, which seems
fine since Linus' isn't likely to be packaged directly.
Um. Really? I can't imagine why Linus's git wouldn't be packaged
directly. He has strongly indicated that folks who want
David A. Wheeler wrote:
Does anyone know of any other issues in how git data is stored that
might cause problems for some situations? Windows' case-insensitive/
case-preserving model for NTFS and vfat32 seems to be enough
(since the case is preserved) so that the format should work,
If git
Ray Lee wrote:
On Mon, 2005-04-18 at 21:04 +, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
The other is replace very instace of identifier `foo` with identifier`bar`.
That could be derived, however, by a particularly smart parser [1].
No, it can't. Seriously. A darcs replace patch is encoded as rules,
Ray Lee wrote:
On Mon, 2005-04-18 at 21:05 -0400, Kevin Smith wrote:
The other is replace very instace of identifier `foo` with
identifier`bar`.
That could be derived, however, by a particularly smart parser [1].
No, it can't. Seriously. A darcs replace patch is encoded as rules, not
effects
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