Well, now it gets more complicated. I want git-p4 to ignore submodules
completely. But it fails only *only* the submodules changed. (At
least, my version fails. I'll try to diff against latest.)
But to debug this, I had to add a dry-run mode to git-p4. And I am
using a version of git-p4 which uses
On 10/06/15 18:04, Christopher Dunn wrote:
Sorry. I thought empty patches were made to work in other cases.
'git-p4' needs to skip these. Wrong mailing list then.
Possibly the right mailing list - can you explain what you mean here
w.r.t git-p4 please?
Thanks!
Luke
On Tue, Jun 9, 2015
Sorry. I thought empty patches were made to work in other cases.
'git-p4' needs to skip these. Wrong mailing list then.
On Tue, Jun 9, 2015 at 1:52 PM, Jens Lehmann wrote:
> Am 05.06.2015 um 01:20 schrieb Christopher Dunn:
>>
>> (Seen in git versions: 2.1.0 and 1.9.3 et al.)
>>
>> $ git format-p
Am 05.06.2015 um 01:20 schrieb Christopher Dunn:
(Seen in git versions: 2.1.0 and 1.9.3 et al.)
$ git format-patch --stdout X^..X | git apply check -
fatal: unrecognized input
This fails when the commit consists of nothing but a submodule change
(as in 'git add submodule foo'), but it passes wh
(Seen in git versions: 2.1.0 and 1.9.3 et al.)
$ git format-patch --stdout X^..X | git apply check -
fatal: unrecognized input
This fails when the commit consists of nothing but a submodule change
(as in 'git add submodule foo'), but it passes when a file change is
added to the same commit.
Ther
5 matches
Mail list logo