On Mon, Nov 02, 2015 at 06:27:52AM +0000, Stenberg Jim (2) wrote:
> My problem:
> "Git merge-base --fork-point" acts unexpected when I refer to remote
> branches (typically "origin/".) With unexpected I mean that if I swap
> the position of the two references that the function takes as argument
> I get different results. I highly suspect that this isn't a feature
> but a bug, or maybe I'm using the function in a way it wasn't intended
> to be used.
> I don't need you to fix it (swapping the arguments solves it), I just
> want you to be aware of it.
>
> History & procedure:
> When I was working on my automatic build script I came across the
> oddity that "Git merge-base --fork-point" behaved differently
> depending on the order in which the two references are passed.
I think this is expected. The documentation for `--fork-point` says:
git merge-base --fork-point <ref> [<commit>]
Find the point at which a branch (or any history that leads to
<commit>) forked from another branch (or any reference) <ref>.
This does not just look for the common ancestor of the two
commits, but also takes into account the reflog of <ref> to see
if the history leading to <commit> forked from an earlier
incarnation of the branch <ref> (see discussion on this mode
below).
Clearly the order of the arguments matters because the reflog is only
inspected for the `<ref>` argument. Since the reflog is involved this
also means that the results are likely to be different between separate
copies of the same repository.
I suspect you do not want to be using `--fork-point` in your build
script; it is intended to help `git rebase` recover from history being
rewritten and if you do not need that behaviour you are probably better
off using the normal `git merge-base <commit> <commit>` mode, which
should give consistent results regardless of the order of the commits.
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