On Mon, Feb 04, 2013 at 02:54:30PM -0500, Ted Zlatanov wrote:
> + print <<EOHIPPUS;
> +
> +$0 [-f AUTHFILE] [-d] get
> +
> +Version $VERSION by tzz\@lifelogs.com. License: BSD.
This here-doc is interpolated so you can use $0 and $VERSION, and
therefore have to quote the @-sign. But later in the here-doc...
> +Thus, when we get "protocol=https\nusername=tzz", this credential
> +helper will look for lines in AUTHFILE that match
Do you need to quote "\n" here?
> +die "Sorry, you need to specify an existing netrc file (with or without a
> .gpg extension) with -f AUTHFILE"
> + unless defined $file;
> +
> +unless (-f $file) {
> + print STDERR "Sorry, the specified netrc $file is not accessible\n" if
> $debug;
> + exit 0;
> +}
Hmm, so it's not an error (just a warning) to say:
git credential-netrc -f /does/not/exist
but it is an error to say:
git credential-netrc
and have it fail to find any netrc files. Shouldn't the latter be a
lesser error than the former?
> +while (<STDIN>) {
> + next unless m/([^=]+)=(.+)/;
> +
> + my ($token, $value) = ($1, $2);
> + die "Unknown search token $1" unless exists $q{$token};
> + $q{$token} = $value;
> +}
Should this regex be anchored at the start of the string? I think the
left-to-right matching means we will correctly match:
key=value with=in it
so it may be OK.
> +if ($debug) {
> + printf STDERR "searching for %s = %s\n", $_, $q{$_} || '(any value)'
> + foreach sort keys %q;
> +}
Leftover one-char indent.
> [...]
The rest looks OK to me.
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