On 11 March 2014 21:06, Evan Huus <eapa...@gmail.com> wrote:

> On Tue, Mar 11, 2014 at 4:58 PM, Graham Bloice
> <graham.blo...@trihedral.com> wrote:
> > On 11 March 2014 20:50, Evan Huus <eapa...@gmail.com> wrote:
> >>
> >> On Tue, Mar 11, 2014 at 4:42 PM, Graham Bloice
> >> <graham.blo...@trihedral.com> wrote:
> >> > On 11 March 2014 20:35, Evan Huus <eapa...@gmail.com> wrote:
> >> >>
> >> >> On Tue, Mar 11, 2014 at 2:01 PM, Roland Knall <rkn...@gmail.com>
> wrote:
> >> >> > Git commit ids differ
> >> >> > between different people (each clone may create their one)
> >> >>
> >> >> Not technically true. If I make a commit with SHA x, push it, and it
> >> >> gets submitted, then it is true that the final SHA in master will be
> y
> >> >> != x. However, the next time I pull then I will get SHA y as well.
> >> >> They x and y technically reference different commits, since y
> contains
> >> >> additional information about who reviewed it, when it was submitted
> >> >> from Gerrit, etc.
> >> >>
> >> >
> >> > But aren't we talking about users, rather than devs?  Users will
> either
> >> > build from a clone from the main repo, or use an automated build, thus
> >> > their
> >> > reference point will be the Gerrit | master SHA whichever is the most
> >> > appropriate name for it.
> >> >
> >> > In any case I don't think this fulfils the initial question.
>  Previously
> >> > we
> >> > could say to users that an issue was fixed in svn r nnnn and they
> would
> >> > "know" that any rev later than that was good.  I don't understand how
> >> > they
> >> > can "know" that with a SHA of the latest master commit | merge.
> >>
> >> SHAs aren't ordered like SVN revisions are (so given two arbitrary
> >> SHAs and nothing else I can't determine which came first) but they do
> >> still have an ordering in the repository.
> >>
> >> Regardless, we can say: fixed in commit SHA. They can pull, and if
> >> "git show SHA" shows the revision then they've got it. Otherwise they
> >> don't.
> >>
> >
> > That doesn't help "users" who only install, not build as their copy of
> > Wireshark doesn't have a list of SHA (or does it?).
> >
> > They only way I can think of resolving that is to refer to dates as they
> are
> > time-ordered (I hope).
>
> Time still works; if it was submitted to master at noon on Monday then
> presumably any automated build from after that point will include the
> relevant change.
>
> Alternatively, the automated build files have the name format:
> Wireshark-$Platform-$Tag-$CommitsSinceTag-g$SHA.exe (e.g.
> Wireshark-win32-1.11.3-1925-g0f73f79.exe)
>
> So if you know the change was in SHA x (and the current latest tag is
> y), you can run "git rev-list y..x --count" and it will give you the
> $CommitsSinceTag value which is strictly increasing like an SVN
> revision number.
>
>
I think you're still missing the point.  Users who install don't have git,
all they have is the "About" box.  The information there "should" be enough
to allow them to locate a bug on Bugzilla and determine if their version
has been "fixed".
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