John Keeping wrote:
> This adds a prefix string to any filename arguments encountered after it
> has been specified.
Very nice. I thought we'd have to resort to path mangling in shell to
fix git-submodule.sh. Glad to see that we can go with something
cleaner.
Perhaps pull some bits from your nice Documentation into the commit message?
> diff --git a/builtin/rev-parse.c b/builtin/rev-parse.c
> index f267a1d..de894c7 100644
> --- a/builtin/rev-parse.c
> +++ b/builtin/rev-parse.c
> @@ -212,11 +212,17 @@ static void show_datestring(const char *flag, const
> char *datestr)
> show(buffer);
> }
>
> -static int show_file(const char *arg)
> +static int show_file(const char *arg, int output_prefix)
Okay, so you've essentially patched show_file() to accept an
additional argument, and modified callers to call with this additional
argument. I suppose
show_(rev|reference|default|flag|rev|with_type|datestring|abbrev)
don't need to be patched, as they are path-independent.
> {
> show_default();
> if ((filter & (DO_NONFLAGS|DO_NOREV)) == (DO_NONFLAGS|DO_NOREV)) {
> - show(arg);
> + if (output_prefix) {
> + const char *prefix = startup_info->prefix;
> + show(prefix_filename(prefix,
> + prefix ? strlen(prefix) : 0,
> + arg));
> + } else
> + show(arg);
Uh, why do you need output_prefix? If startup_info->prefix is set,
use it. Is startup_info->prefix set by anyone by cmd_rev_parse()?
> @@ -470,6 +476,7 @@ N_("git rev-parse --parseopt [options] -- [<args>...]\n"
> int cmd_rev_parse(int argc, const char **argv, const char *prefix)
> @@ -535,6 +542,13 @@ int cmd_rev_parse(int argc, const char **argv, const
> char *prefix)
> i++;
> continue;
> }
> + if (!strcmp(arg, "--prefix")) {
> + prefix = argv[i+1];
> + startup_info->prefix = prefix;
> + output_prefix = 1;
> + i++;
> + continue;
> + }
Wait, why isn't prefix filled in when run_builtin() calls this? Oh,
right: because we didn't mark this builtin with RUN_SETUP or
RUN_SETUP_GENTLY. Okay, now why didn't we change that? Because it
would be a major problem (all our scripts would break) if rev-parse
did cd-to-toplevel.
Why are you setting prefix to argv[i+1], and then setting
startup_info->prefix to that? Is anyone else in cmd_rev_parse() going
to use it?
> +prefix=$(git rev-parse --show-prefix)
> +cd "$(git rev-parse --show-toplevel)"
> +eval "set -- $(git rev-parse --sq --prefix "$prefix" "$@")"
I'm wondering if you need such a convoluted usage though. Will you
ever need to specify a prefix by hand that is different from what git
rev-parse --show-toplevel returns? If not, why don't you just
rev-parse --emulate-toplevel, and get rid of specifying prefix by hand
altogether? Then again, this is a plumbing command, so the simplicity
is probably more valuable.
> diff --git a/t/t1513-rev-parse-prefix.sh b/t/t1513-rev-parse-prefix.sh
> new file mode 100755
> index 0000000..5ef48d2
> --- /dev/null
> +++ b/t/t1513-rev-parse-prefix.sh
> +test_expect_success 'empty prefix -- file' '
> + git rev-parse --prefix "" -- top sub1/file1 >actual &&
> + cat <<-EOF >expected &&
Nit: when you're not putting in variables, you can cat <<-\EOF.
> +test_expect_success 'empty prefix HEAD:./path' '
> + git rev-parse --prefix "" HEAD:./top >actual &&
> + git rev-parse HEAD:top >expected &&
Nit: why did you change "./top" to "top"? Your --prefix option
doesn't require you to change your arguments accordingly, does it?
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