On Thu, Apr 23, 2015 at 10:47 AM, Junio C Hamano gits...@pobox.com wrote:
On Wed, Apr 22, 2015 at 3:32 PM, Jens Lehmann jens.lehm...@web.de wrote:
...
But it is unclear if we should still do (2) when subrepo/.git is
no longer there. That has to be done manually and it may be an
indication
Duy Nguyen pclo...@gmail.com writes:
I think we should stop the ok-to-replace feature when submodules are
involved, we consider submdules much more valuable than symlinks.
Hmm, I am not sure valuable is a good criterion to decide what
should happen, though.
The push to use .git that is a file
Jens Lehmann jens.lehm...@web.de writes:
Am 21.04.2015 um 23:08 schrieb Junio C Hamano:
I looked at the test script update. The new test does (I am
rephrasing to make it clearer):
mkdir -p dir/ectory
git init dir/ectory ;# a new directory inside top-level project
(
Am 21.04.2015 um 23:08 schrieb Junio C Hamano:
Duy Nguyen pclo...@gmail.com writes:
On Mon, Apr 20, 2015 at 12:37 PM, Junio C Hamano gits...@pobox.com wrote:
Duy Nguyen pclo...@gmail.com writes:
But if you look at it another way, cd subrepo; git add . should be
the same as git add subrepo
On Wed, Apr 22, 2015 at 3:32 PM, Jens Lehmann jens.lehm...@web.de wrote:
...
But it is unclear if we should still do (2) when subrepo/.git is
no longer there. That has to be done manually and it may be an
indication that is clear enough that the end user wants the
directory to be a normal
Am 22.04.2015 um 21:58 schrieb Junio C Hamano:
Jens Lehmann jens.lehm...@web.de writes:
Am 21.04.2015 um 23:08 schrieb Junio C Hamano:
I looked at the test script update. The new test does (I am
rephrasing to make it clearer):
mkdir -p dir/ectory
git init dir/ectory ;# a new
Duy Nguyen pclo...@gmail.com writes:
On Mon, Apr 20, 2015 at 12:37 PM, Junio C Hamano gits...@pobox.com wrote:
Duy Nguyen pclo...@gmail.com writes:
But if you look at it another way, cd subrepo; git add . should be
the same as git add subrepo ...
Once you cd into subrepo, you are in a
Am 18.04.2015 um 03:19 schrieb Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy:
A path(spec) from git perspective consists of two parts, the prefix,
and the rest. The prefix covers the part of `pwd` after expanding ..
components. The split is to support case-insensitive match in a sane
way (see 93d9353, especially the big
On Sun, Apr 19, 2015 at 7:53 PM, Jens Lehmann jens.lehm...@web.de wrote:
And me thinks it should error out. We already do that when trying
to add a specific file from above the gitlink:
$ git add subrepo/a
fatal: Pathspec 'subrepo/a' is in submodule 'subrepo'
And from below the
Duy Nguyen pclo...@gmail.com writes:
But if you look at it another way, cd subrepo; git add . should be
the same as git add subrepo ...
Once you cd into subrepo, you are in a different world, a world
different from the toplevel project. git add . over there should
mean add everything in
On Mon, Apr 20, 2015 at 12:37 PM, Junio C Hamano gits...@pobox.com wrote:
Duy Nguyen pclo...@gmail.com writes:
But if you look at it another way, cd subrepo; git add . should be
the same as git add subrepo ...
Once you cd into subrepo, you are in a different world, a world
different from
A path(spec) from git perspective consists of two parts, the prefix,
and the rest. The prefix covers the part of `pwd` after expanding ..
components. The split is to support case-insensitive match in a sane
way (see 93d9353, especially the big comment block added in dir.c).
Normally the prefix is
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