On Thu, Dec 20, 2018 at 10:37:21AM +0200, Orgad Shaneh wrote:
> I played around with t5403-post-checkout-hook, and noticed that its
> state is not exactly what I'd expect it to be.
>
> The test setup is:
> echo Data for commit0. >a &&
> echo Data for commit0. >b &&
> git update-index --add a &&
> git update-index --add b &&
> tree0=$(git write-tree) &&
> commit0=$(echo setup | git commit-tree $tree0) &&
> git update-ref refs/heads/master $commit0 &&
> git clone ./. clone1 &&
> git clone ./. clone2 &&
> GIT_DIR=clone2/.git git branch new2 &&
> echo Data for commit1. >clone2/b &&
> GIT_DIR=clone2/.git git add clone2/b &&
> GIT_DIR=clone2/.git git commit -m new2
>
> Now, the line before the last one executes git add clone2/b with GIT_DIR set.
When GIT_DIR is set but not GIT_WORK_TREE, the current directory is
taken as the working tree.
So that will find clone2/b (from the current directory, which is a real
file), and add an index entry with that path "clone2/b" and the sha1 of
that content.
But when commands are run from inside "clone2", they will naturally
treat "clone2" as the working tree. And since "clone2/b" does not exist
inside there, they will say "oops, it looks like this file has been
deleted".
> I'd expect that to add b inside clone2, but instead it adds an
> inexistent clone2/clone2/b, and if I stop at this line, then the
> status shows:
Sort of. It never sees the path "clone2/clone2/b", but the path in the
index coupled with the working tree being inside clone2 means that it
would look for such a file.
> On branch master
> Your branch is up to date with 'origin/master'.
>
> Changes to be committed:
> (use "git reset HEAD <file>..." to unstage)
>
> new file: clone2/b
>
> Changes not staged for commit:
> (use "git add/rm <file>..." to update what will be committed)
> (use "git checkout -- <file>..." to discard changes in working directory)
>
> modified: b
> deleted: clone2/b
>
> Is this the intended behavior? It looks like that's not what the test
> meant to do anyway...
This is the expected behavior if you did "cd clone2 && git status".
Looking at the test, I don't think it quite meant to do this. It looks
like it predates "git -C", but for some reason did not want to "cd" in a
subshell.
I think it would be better written as:
git -C clone2 add b &&
git -C clone2 commit -m new2
or:
(
cd clone2 &&
git add b &&
git commit -m new2
)
And ditto for all of the other uses of $GIT_DIR in that script. E.g.,
the ones that do:
GIT_DIR=clone1/.git git checkout master
are likely writing the contents of clone1's master branch to the
_current_ directory (not the working tree in clone1).
> And if I change it to (cd clone2 && git add b), then the commits look
> reasonable, but step 6 fails.
You probably just need to update the other calls, too, so they all
match.
-Peff