My automatic pull this morning produced the following messages, which
seem to indicate that something's up with git pull now.
git-pasky-0.4 (7bef49b5d53218ed3fa8bac291b5515c6479810c)
> MOTD:
> MOTD: Welcome to the Linux Kernel Archive.
> MOTD:
> MOTD: Due to U.S. Exports Regulations, all crypto
On Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 01:09:42AM +0200, Petr Baudis wrote:
> > Essentially, with BK, at 7am localtime each morning, I'd:
> >
> > - update my baseline linux 2.6 tree
> > - for each working tree which may be pulled from
> > - if the baseline is a superset
> > - update working tree from basel
> "KS" == Kevin Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
KS> "what's so special about files ?" where the author suggests that
KS> existing SCM systems are so blinded by the tradition of file
KS> orientation that they can't see that there might be alternatives.
Correct: file orientation is eventually
On 19 Apr 2005 08:31:42 +0300, Marc Girod <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > "KS" == Kevin Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> KS> "what's so special about files ?" where the author suggests that
> KS> existing SCM systems are so blinded by the tradition of file
> KS> orientation that they can't
Dear diary, on Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 07:43:07AM CEST, I got a letter
where bert hubert <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> told me that...
> On Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 05:51:07AM +0200, Petr Baudis wrote:
> > http://pasky.or.cz/~pasky/dev/git
>
> I pulled the tar.bz2 and did make:
> gcc -g -O3 -Wall -o merge-cach
On Mon, Apr 18, 2005 at 05:45:48PM -0700, Greg KH wrote:
> On Mon, Apr 18, 2005 at 05:31:16PM -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote:
> >
> >
> > On Mon, 18 Apr 2005, Greg KH wrote:
> > >
> > > Here's a small patch to commit-tree.c that does two things:
> >
> > Gaah, I really was hoping that people wouldn'
> > Aye, that will require some metadata on the git side (the hack,
> > suggested by Linus, of using git hashes to notice moves won't work).
> So, why won't it work?
Because two files can legitimately have identical contents without
being ``the same'' file from the VC system's point of view.
In
Dear diary, on Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 09:02:51AM CEST, I got a letter
where Russell King <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> told me that...
> My automatic pull this morning produced the following messages, which
> seem to indicate that something's up with git pull now.
>
> git-pasky-0.4 (7bef49b5d53218ed3fa8bac291
On Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 10:23:41AM +0200, Petr Baudis wrote:
> Dear diary, on Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 09:02:51AM CEST, I got a letter
> where Russell King <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> told me that...
> > My automatic pull this morning produced the following messages, which
> > seem to indicate that something's
David Mansfield <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Catalin Marinas wrote:
>> AFAIK, cvsps uses the date/time to create the changesets. There is a
>> problem with the BKCVS export since some files in the same commit can
>> have a different time (by an hour). I posted a mail some time ago
>> about this -
>
Dear diary, on Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 10:31:13AM CEST, I got a letter
where Russell King <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> told me that...
> On Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 10:23:41AM +0200, Petr Baudis wrote:
> > Dear diary, on Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 09:02:51AM CEST, I got a letter
> > where Russell King <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Hi all,
I'm working on an OO perl alternative to Petr's git scripts, which I'm
currently calling "yogi" (your other git interface). While I'm not
ready to release that just yet, I wanted to start floating some patches to
the core plumbing to support the respective packages' potentially
divergent
init-db calls getenv(DB_ENVIRONMENT) twice. Once should be enough.
This patch applies on top of:
[PATCH 0/8] init-db.c cleanup, add INDEX_FILE_DIRECTORY support
init-db.c |3 +--
1 files changed, 1 insertion(+), 2 deletions(-)
Signed-Off-By: Zach Welch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Signed-Off
This makes init-db work for common object database.
This patch applies on top of:
[PATCH 0/8] init-db.c cleanup, add INDEX_FILE_DIRECTORY support
[PATCH 1/8] init-db.c: [RESEND] remove redundant getenv call
init-db.c |2 +-
1 files changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-)
Signed
This patch factors the init-db directory creation into a new function,
which is then reused in the next patch.
This patch applies on top of:
[PATCH 0/8] init-db.c cleanup, add INDEX_FILE_DIRECTORY support
[PATCH 1/8] init-db.c: [RESEND] remove redundant getenv call
[PATCH
This patch give init-db the ability for the index directory to be
overridden by the INDEX_FILE_DIRECTORY environment variable.
This patch applies on top of:
[PATCH 0/8] init-db.c cleanup, add INDEX_FILE_DIRECTORY support
[PATCH 1/8] init-db.c: [RESEND] remove redundant getenv call
Move redundant mkdir call logic into helper function.
This patch applies on top of:
[PATCH 0/8] init-db.c cleanup, add INDEX_FILE_DIRECTORY support
[PATCH 1/8] init-db.c: [RESEND] remove redundant getenv call
[PATCH 2/8] init-db.c: [RESEND] make init-db work with common obj
This patch give read-tree the ability for the index directory to be
overridden by the INDEX_FILE_DIRECTORY environment variable.
This patch applies on top of:
[PATCH 0/8] init-db.c cleanup, add INDEX_FILE_DIRECTORY support
[PATCH 1/8] init-db.c: [RESEND] remove redundant getenv ca
This patch give update-cache the ability for the index directory to be
overridden by the INDEX_FILE_DIRECTORY environment variable.
This patch applies on top of:
[PATCH 0/8] init-db.c cleanup, add INDEX_FILE_DIRECTORY support
[PATCH 1/8] init-db.c: [RESEND] remove redundant getenv
This patch give read-cache the ability for the index directory to be
overridden by the INDEX_FILE_DIRECTORY environment variable.
This patch applies on top of:
[PATCH 0/8] init-db.c cleanup, add INDEX_FILE_DIRECTORY support
[PATCH 1/8] init-db.c: [RESEND] remove redundant getenv c
David A. Wheeler wrote:
I propose changing "pull" to ONLY download, and "update" to pull AND merge.
Why? It seems oddly inconsistent that "pull" sometimes merges
in changes, but at other times it doesn't.
true
I propose that there be two subcommands, "pull" and "update"
(now that "update" isn't a
Dear diary, on Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 11:18:55AM CEST, I got a letter
where David Greaves <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> told me that...
> What's the most common thing to do? pull or update?
update for normal users.
> which is easier to type?
> what are people used to?
I think 'git up' is easier to type than
On Tue, 2005-04-19 at 11:28 +0200, Petr Baudis wrote:
> Dear diary, on Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 11:18:55AM CEST, I got a letter
> where David Greaves <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> told me that...
>
> Dunno. I do it personally all the time, with git at least.
>
> What do others think? :-)
>
I think pull is pul
On Mon, Apr 18, 2005 at 08:38:25AM -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote:
> On Mon, 18 Apr 2005, David Roundy wrote:
> > In particular, it would make life (that is, life interacting back
> > and forth with git) easier if we were to embed darcs patches in their
> > entirety in the git comment block.
>
>
Dear diary, on Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 12:05:10PM CEST, I got a letter
where Martin Schlemmer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> told me that...
> On Tue, 2005-04-19 at 11:28 +0200, Petr Baudis wrote:
> > Dear diary, on Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 11:18:55AM CEST, I got a letter
> > where David Greaves <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
On Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 02:55:05AM +0200, Juliusz Chroboczek wrote:
> [Using git as a backend for Darcs.]
...
> >> 1. remove the assumption that patch IDs have a fixed format. Patch
> >> IDs should be opaque blobs of binary data that Darcs only compares
> >> for equality.
>
> > I'm not really
On Mon, Apr 18, 2005 at 06:42:11PM -0700, Ray Lee wrote:
> On Mon, 2005-04-18 at 21:05 -0400, Kevin Smith wrote:
> > You could guess, but that's not good enough for darcs to be able to
> > reliably commute the patches later.
>
> Who said anything about guessing? If a user replaces all instances of
[Removing Linus from CC, keeping the Git list -- or should we remove it?]
> I'm not clear why it would be necesary, and it takes the only immutable
> piece of information regarding a patch, and makes it variable.
Er... I'm not suggesting to make it variable, just to make it an
opaque blob of byte
Dear diary, on Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 02:20:55PM CEST, I got a letter
where Juliusz Chroboczek <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> told me that...
> > The problem is that there is no sequence of alien versions that one can
> > differentiate. Git has a branched history, with each version that follows
> > a merge hav
Dear all,
please don't bother me with ``read the source dude'' or similar answers to this
post. If it's tone or contents just piss You off, ignore it.
I read a little about git lately, and tried to get it running the
last two days. I found the following things lacking:
1) There is no clear (e
On Sat, Apr 16, 2005 at 07:37:02PM +0200, Martin Uecker wrote:
> On Sat, Apr 16, 2005 at 11:11:00AM -0400, C. Scott Ananian wrote:
> > The rsync approach does not use fixed chunk boundaries; this is necessary
> > to ensure good storage reuse for the expected case (ie; inserting a single
> > lin
Is there a way to check out a tree without changing the mtime of any
files that you have already checked out and which are the same as the
version you are checking out? It seems that checkout-cache -a doesn't
overwrite any existing files, and checkout-cache -f -a overwrites all
files and gives the
On Tue, 2005-04-19 at 23:00 +1000, Paul Mackerras wrote:
> Is there a way to check out a tree without changing the mtime of any
> files that you have already checked out and which are the same as the
> version you are checking out? It seems that checkout-cache -a doesn't
> overwrite any existing f
is there any 'export commit as patch' support in git-pasky? I didnt find
any such command (maybe it got added meanwhile), so i'm using the 'ge'
hack below.
e.g. i typically look at commits via 'git log', and then when i see
something interesting, i look at the commit via the 'ge' script. E.g.
* David Woodhouse <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Tue, 2005-04-19 at 23:00 +1000, Paul Mackerras wrote:
> > Is there a way to check out a tree without changing the mtime of any
> > files that you have already checked out and which are the same as the
> > version you are checking out? It seems th
Klaus Robert Suetterlin wrote:
> 1) There is no clear (e.g. by name) distinction between ``git as done
> by Linus'', which is a kind of content addressable database with added
> semantics, and ``git as done by the rest of You'', which is a kind of
> SCM on top of Linuses stuff.
I also see this as
> I disagree. This already forces you to have two branches (one to pull
> from to get the data, mirroring the remote branch, one for your real
> work) uselessly and needlessly.
>
> ...
> These naming issues may appear silly but I think they matter big time
> for usability, intuitiveness, and learn
* Kevin Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Klaus Robert Suetterlin wrote:
> > 1) There is no clear (e.g. by name) distinction between ``git as done
> > by Linus'', which is a kind of content addressable database with added
> > semantics, and ``git as done by the rest of You'', which is a kind of
Hi,
I uploaded a first draft of wit to
http://www.absolutegiganten.org/wit
Right now it's a minimal web interface on top of git. Unpack it, make
sure you've got at least Python 2.3, optionally install c2html, adjust
config.py and start from the root with
$ PYTHONPATH=. python git/web/wit.py
Point
Ingo Molnar wrote:
> * Kevin Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>>Git is very immature, and currently should only be used by brave
>>pioneers. About the only way for a mortal to even try git is to stick
>>to git-pasky releases, and not try to track all the patches flying
>>around.
>
> hey, it'
On Tue, 2005-04-19 at 12:50 +0200, Petr Baudis wrote:
> Dear diary, on Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 12:05:10PM CEST, I got a letter
> where Martin Schlemmer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> told me that...
> > On Tue, 2005-04-19 at 11:28 +0200, Petr Baudis wrote:
> > > Dear diary, on Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 11:18:55AM CES
Petr Baudis wrote:
Dear diary, on Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 03:40:54AM CEST, I got a letter
where Steven Cole <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> told me that...
Here is perhaps a better way to provide detailed help for each
git command. A command.help file for each command can be
written in the style of a man page.
On Tue, 19 Apr 2005, David Roundy wrote:
>
> Would a small amount of human-readable change information be acceptable in
> the free-form comment area? In the rename thread I got the impression this
> would be okay for renames. For example,
>
> rename foo bar
Sure. That's human-readable and mea
On Tue, 2005-04-19 at 02:52 +0200, Petr Baudis wrote:
> Dear diary, on Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 02:44:15AM CEST, I got a letter
> where Kay Sievers <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> told me that...
> > I'm hacking on a simple web interface, cause I missed the bkweb too much.
> > It can't do much more than browse thr
David Greaves wrote:
Petr Baudis wrote:
Dear diary, on Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 03:40:54AM CEST, I got a letter
where Steven Cole <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> told me that...
Here is perhaps a better way to provide detailed help for each
git command. A command.help file for each command can be
written in the s
Linus Torvalds wrote:
(In other words: if it looks like something a careful human _could_ have
written, it's certainly ok. But if it looks like something a careful human
would have used a script to generate 40 entries of, it's bad).
Linus
This is the way that darcs would currently represent a
On Tue, 19 Apr 2005, Tupshin Harper wrote:
>
> I suspect that any use of wildcards in a new format would be impossible
> for darcs since it wouldn't allow darcs to construct dependencies,
> though I'll leave it to david to respond to that.
Note that git _does_ very efficiently (and I mean _ve
Hello everyone,
I did a quick experiment with applying/commit 100 patches from the suse kernel
into a kernel git tree, which quilt can do in 2 seconds. git needs 1m5s.
The primary performance problem during each commit is write-tree recalculating
the hash of each directory, even though the con
On Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 05:59:45PM +0200, Kay Sievers wrote:
> On Tue, 2005-04-19 at 02:52 +0200, Petr Baudis wrote:
> > Dear diary, on Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 02:44:15AM CEST, I got a letter
> > where Kay Sievers <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> told me that...
> > > I'm hacking on a simple web interface, cause I
Dear diary, on Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 02:36:32PM CEST, I got a letter
where Klaus Robert Suetterlin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> told me that...
> 1) There is no clear (e.g. by name) distinction between ``git as done
> by Linus'', which is a kind of content addressable database with added
> semantics, and ``g
Dear diary, on Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 03:48:43PM CEST, I got a letter
where Ingo Molnar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> told me that...
> is there any 'export commit as patch' support in git-pasky? I didnt find
> any such command (maybe it got added meanwhile), so i'm using the 'ge'
> hack below.
>
> e.g. i t
Dear diary, on Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 03:00:14PM CEST, I got a letter
where Paul Mackerras <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> told me that...
> Is there a way to check out a tree without changing the mtime of any
> files that you have already checked out and which are the same as the
> version you are checking out?
Hello!
Current git-pasky cannot be compiled properly unless it's already
installed. The rule for creating gitversion.sh requires commit-id in
the PATH, which won't be there until "make install" is run.
Also, commit-id runs gitXnormid.sh, which in turn runs cat-file. All of
them should be from t
Dear diary, on Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 04:41:34PM CEST, I got a letter
where David Greaves <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> told me that...
> If Petr wants the top comment to be extracted by help then maybe a
> bottom comment block could contain the more complete text?
> I *really* think that the user docs should
On Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 09:52:48AM -0700, Greg KH wrote:
> On Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 05:59:45PM +0200, Kay Sievers wrote:
> > On Tue, 2005-04-19 at 02:52 +0200, Petr Baudis wrote:
> > > Dear diary, on Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 02:44:15AM CEST, I got a letter
> > > where Kay Sievers <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> tol
On Tue, 19 Apr 2005, Chris Mason wrote:
>
> I did a quick experiment with applying/commit 100 patches from the suse
> kernel
> into a kernel git tree, which quilt can do in 2 seconds. git needs 1m5s.
Note that I don't think you want to replace quilt with git. The approaches
are totally diff
Petr Baudis wrote:
Dear diary, on Mon, Apr 18, 2005 at 06:42:26AM CEST, I got a letter
where Steven Cole <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> told me that...
[snippage]
This patch will provide the comment lines in the shell script associated
with the command, cleaned up a bit for presentation.
BUGS: This will also
Greg KH kroah.com> writes:
[...]
> Looks good, care to post the updated version?
http://ehlo.org/~kay/
What about a git repo of gitweb?
gitweb2.pl is nice with the browse function. BTW, but there's a '1' artefact
right after the browse link in action=show_tree :-)
Kay, your script is really
On Tue, 19 Apr 2005, Petr Baudis wrote:
>
> I'd actually prefer, if:
>
> (i) checkout-cache simply wouldn't touch files whose stat matches with
> what is in the cache; it updates the cache with the stat informations
> of touched files
Run "update-cache --refresh" _before_ doing the "checkout-c
On Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 07:32:42PM +0200, Kay Sievers wrote:
> On Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 09:52:48AM -0700, Greg KH wrote:
> > On Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 05:59:45PM +0200, Kay Sievers wrote:
> > > On Tue, 2005-04-19 at 02:52 +0200, Petr Baudis wrote:
> > > > Dear diary, on Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 02:44:15AM
Hello!
This patch allows to enable collision check and subsecond time
resolution by uncommenting one line. Also, the corresponding comments
have been improved.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Roskin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
--- a/Makefile
+++ b/Makefile
@@ -1,13 +1,18 @@
-# -DCOLLISION_CHECK if you believe tha
Dear diary, on Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 07:35:15PM CEST, I got a letter
where Steven Cole <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> told me that...
> Example:
..snip a perfect-looking example..
> -
> Speaking of 'git diff', I ran that before applying the following patch,
> and got a diff starting thusly:
>
> --- /
On Tuesday 19 April 2005 13:36, Linus Torvalds wrote:
> On Tue, 19 Apr 2005, Chris Mason wrote:
> > I did a quick experiment with applying/commit 100 patches from the suse
> > kernel into a kernel git tree, which quilt can do in 2 seconds. git
> > needs 1m5s.
>
> Note that I don't think you want t
On Tue, 19 Apr 2005, Linus Torvalds wrote:
>
> The real expense right now of a merge is that we always forget all the
> stat information when we do a merge (since it does a read-tree). I have a
> cunning way to fix that, though, which is to make "read-tree -m" read in
> the old index state like
On Tue, 19 Apr 2005, Petr Baudis wrote:
> I disagree. This already forces you to have two branches (one to pull
> from to get the data, mirroring the remote branch, one for your real
> work) uselessly and needlessly.
If you pull in a non-tracked tree, it certainly won't apply the
changes, so you
On Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 10:36:06AM -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote:
> In fact, git has all the same issues that BK had, and for the same
> fundamental reason: if you do distributed work, you have to always
> "append" stuff, and that means that you can never re-order anything after
> the fact.
You c
* Petr Baudis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Dear diary, on Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 03:48:43PM CEST, I got a letter
> where Ingo Molnar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> told me that...
> > is there any 'export commit as patch' support in git-pasky? I didnt find
> > any such command (maybe it got added meanwhile),
On Tue, 19 Apr 2005, Chris Mason wrote:
>
> Very true, you can't replace quilt with git without ruining both of them.
> But
> it would be nice to take a quilt tree and turn it into a git tree for merging
> purposes, or to make use of whatever visualization tools might exist someday.
>
Fa
Petr Baudis wrote:
Dear diary, on Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 07:35:15PM CEST, I got a letter
where Steven Cole <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> told me that...
I've been working on git.pl and getting help working nicely
things to try:
git.pl help
git.pl add
git.pl add --help
git.pl add --man
git.pl help add
The main
On Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 07:03:20PM +0200, Petr Baudis wrote:
> Dear diary, on Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 03:48:43PM CEST, I got a letter
> where Ingo Molnar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> told me that...
> > is there any 'export commit as patch' support in git-pasky? I didnt find
> > any such command (maybe it got
On Mon, Apr 18, 2005 at 09:39:38PM -0700, Greg KH wrote:
> Alright, let's try some small i2c and w1 patches...
>
> Could you merge with:
> kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/gregkh/i2c-2.6.git/
Nice, it looks like the merge of this tree, and my usb tree worked just
fine.
So, what does thi
On Tue, 19 Apr 2005, Greg KH wrote:
>
> Nice, it looks like the merge of this tree, and my usb tree worked just
> fine.
Yup, it all seems to work out.
> So, what does this now mean? Is your kernel.org git tree now going to
> be the "real" kernel tree that you will be working off of now? Shou
Dear diary, on Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 08:56:07PM CEST, I got a letter
where Ingo Molnar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> told me that...
> and please fix gitXnormid.sh to simply echo nothing and return with a -1
> exit value when a nonsensical ID is passed to it. Right now the output
> is quite ugly if you do '
Hello!
It shouldn't be necessary to patch Makefile to specify where scripts
should be installed. This patch introduces a variable bindir for that
purpose. The name of the variable was chosen for compatibility with
projects using Automake.
For example, to install scripts to /usr/local/bin use:
m
On Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 12:40:44PM -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote:
> I'm still working out some performance issues with merges (the actual
> "merge" operation itself is very fast, but I've been trying to make the
> subsequent "update the working directory tree to the right thing" be much
> better).
O
On Tue, 19 Apr 2005, Greg KH wrote:
>
> Ok, if you want some practice with "real" merges, feel free to merge from
> the following two trees whenever you are ready:
> kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/gregkh/aoe-2.6.git/
> for 11 aoe bugfix patches, and:
> kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/k
Hello!
This patch improves option handling for gitdiff.sh. Now "-p" doesn't
need to precede "-r", although all options still have to be placed
before the file names. Also, the patch introduces a minimal usage info
for the script.
The patch is against current git-pasky.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Ros
Fix a stupid typo from the last mkdir refactorng patch.
init-db.c |2 +-
1 files changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-)
Signed-Off-By: Zach Welch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
--- a/init-db.c 2005-04-19 13:06:11.0 -0700
+++ a/init-db.c 2005-04-19 13:06:16.0 -0700
@@ -11,7 +11,7 @@
David Greaves wrote:
Petr Baudis wrote:
Dear diary, on Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 07:35:15PM CEST, I got a letter
where Steven Cole <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> told me that...
I've been working on git.pl and getting help working nicely
things to try:
git.pl help
git.pl add
git.pl add --help
git.pl add --man
git.
Steven Cole wrote:
Speaking of "I think", the name "cogito" was suggested for the
SCM layer, but IIRC Linus suggested staying with just plain git. Petr
suggested tig, perhaps because it looks at git from another point of view.
I haven't read _all_ the mails - I thought cogito was kinda selected and
On Tuesday 19 April 2005 15:03, Linus Torvalds wrote:
> On Tue, 19 Apr 2005, Chris Mason wrote:
> > Very true, you can't replace quilt with git without ruining both of them.
> > But it would be nice to take a quilt tree and turn it into a git tree
> > for merging purposes, or to make use of whatev
Hi,
I've uploaded a new wit to http://www.absolutegiganten.org/wit
Wit is a web interface for git. Right now it includes: views of blob,
commit and tree objects, generating patches for the commits, downloading
of gz or bzip2 tarballs of trees.
It's easy to setup and a simple stand alone server c
On Tue, 19 Apr 2005, Chris Mason wrote:
>
> Regardless, putting it into the index somehow should be fastest, I'll see
> what
> I can do.
Start by putting it in at "read-tree" time, and adding the code to
invalidate all parent directory indexes when somebody changes a file in
the index (ie "up
Hello,
I've hit a strange bug in merge-base I don't want to debug now. ;-)
I've been doing my regular git pull test from my main branch, but
suddenly git merge wanted to do a tree merge instead of fast-forward.
What went wrong?
The commits tree looks like:
36c764 -- 808162 -- .. -- 8
On Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 01:20:47PM -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote:
>
>
> On Tue, 19 Apr 2005, Greg KH wrote:
> >
> > Ok, if you want some practice with "real" merges, feel free to merge from
> > the following two trees whenever you are ready:
> > kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/gregkh/aoe-2
On Tue, 19 Apr 2005, Greg KH wrote:
>
> It looks like your domain name isn't set up properly for your box (which
> is why it worked for you, but not me before, causing that patch).
No, I think it's a bug in your domainname changes. I don't think you
should do the domainname at all if the hostna
On Monday 18 April 2005 10:05 pm, Kevin Smith wrote:
> The big feature of a darcs replace patch is that it works forward and
> backward in time. Let me try to come up with an example that can help
> explain it. Hopefully I'll get it right. Let's start with a file like
> this that exists in a projec
On Tue, 19 Apr 2005, Linus Torvalds wrote:
On Tue, 19 Apr 2005, Chris Mason wrote:
Very true, you can't replace quilt with git without ruining both of them.
But
it would be nice to take a quilt tree and turn it into a git tree for merging
purposes, or to make use of whatever visualization tools m
On Tue, 19 Apr 2005, David Lang wrote:
>
> what if you turned the forest of quilt patches into a forest of git trees?
> (essentially applying each patch against the baseline seperatly) would
> this make sense or be useful?
It has a certain charm, but the fact is, it gets really messy to sort
Linus Torvalds wrote:
On Tue, 19 Apr 2005, Greg KH wrote:
Nice, it looks like the merge of this tree, and my usb tree worked just
fine.
Yup, it all seems to work out.
[many files patched]
patching file mm/mmap.c
patching file net/bridge/br_sysfs_if.c
patching file scripts/ver_linux
---
On Tue, 2005-04-19 at 15:00 -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote:
>
> On Tue, 19 Apr 2005, Greg KH wrote:
> >
> > It looks like your domain name isn't set up properly for your box (which
> > is why it worked for you, but not me before, causing that patch).
>
> No, I think it's a bug in your domainname ch
On Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 03:00:04PM -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote:
>
>
> On Tue, 19 Apr 2005, Greg KH wrote:
> >
> > It looks like your domain name isn't set up properly for your box (which
> > is why it worked for you, but not me before, causing that patch).
>
> No, I think it's a bug in your dom
On Mon, Apr 18, 2005 at 12:43:23AM -0700, Andy Isaacson wrote:
>
> I'm not going to do the sums, but I would hazard a guess that it's more
> likely your PC suffered a cosmic-ray-induced memory fault - EACH OF THE
> FOUR TIMES YOU TESTED IT - causing it to report the same MD5, than that
> you actua
On Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 06:27:38PM -0400, Daniel Jacobowitz wrote:
> On Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 03:00:04PM -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote:
> >
> >
> > On Tue, 19 Apr 2005, Greg KH wrote:
> > >
> > > It looks like your domain name isn't set up properly for your box (which
> > > is why it worked for you
Dear diary, on Wed, Apr 20, 2005 at 12:19:01AM CEST, I got a letter
where Steven Cole <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> told me that...
> Linus Torvalds wrote:
> >
> >On Tue, 19 Apr 2005, Greg KH wrote:
> >
> >>Nice, it looks like the merge of this tree, and my usb tree worked just
> >>fine.
> >
> >
> >Yup, it a
On Tue, 19 Apr 2005, Steven Cole wrote:
>
> But perhaps a progress bar right about here might be
> a good thing for the terminally impatient.
>
> real3m54.909s
> user0m14.835s
> sys 0m10.587s
>
> 4 minutes might be long enough to cause some folks to lose hope.
Well, the real operat
Dear diary, on Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 10:20:47PM CEST, I got a letter
where Linus Torvalds <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> told me that...
> Pasky? Can you check my latest git stuff, notably read-tree.c and the
> changes to git-pull-script?
I've made git merge to use read-tree -m, HTH.
I will probably not buy
Daniel Barkalow wrote:
>See, I don't think you ever want to just pull. You want to
>pull-and-do-something, but the something could be any operation...
In a _logical_ sense that's true; I'd only want to pull data if I intended
to (possibly) do something with it. But as a _practical_ matter,
I can s
(Sorry for the delayed reply -- I'm living on tape delay for a bit.)
On Mon, 2005-04-18 at 22:05 -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].
> >>
On Wed, 20 Apr 2005, Martin Schlemmer wrote:
>
> Correct me if I am wrong, but the right way to do this is to set the
> hostname to just that - the hostname, and add 'domain foo.com'
> to /etc/resolv.conf.
I'll correct you.
The fact is, that's not what people do. Not me, not kernel.org, not _
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