On Tue, Mar 29, 2016 at 11:00:03PM +0100, John Keeping wrote:
> On Tue, Mar 29, 2016 at 05:21:43PM -0400, Jeff King wrote:
> > On Tue, Mar 29, 2016 at 09:52:08PM +0100, John Keeping wrote:
> >
> > > > Yeah, I think this is a bug. Presumably what is happening is that we are
> > > > too eager to "cd $GIT_WORK_TREE" inside git-rev-parse, and by the time
> > > > we ask "are we in a work tree", the answer has become yes. But the
> > > > caller really wants to know "am _I_ inside the work tree".
> > >
> > > I don't think that's what's happening. Try:
> > >
> > > $ cd .git/
> > > $ GIT_WORK_TREE=.. git rev-parse --is-inside-work-tree
> > > true
> > >
> > > so I think it's that we refuse to assume that the directory above a Git
> > > directory is a working tree (something similar happens when the
> > > "core.worktree" config variable is set). I'm not convinced that's
> > > unreasonable.
> >
> > Yeah, you're right, but I'm not sure how your example shows that, (isn't
> > it basically the same as Elliott's original, except using a relative
> > path?). A more compelling counter-example to my hypothesis is:
> >
> > $ cd .git
> > $ GIT_WORK_TREE=/tmp git rev-parse --is-inside-work-tree
> > false
> >
> > So it is not that we chdir too early, but just that we blindly check "is
> > $(pwd) inside $GIT_WORK_TREE". And it does not create a problem for the
> > normal discovered-path cases, because either:
> >
> > - we discovered .git by walking up the directory tree, which means we
> > must be in a work-tree
> >
> > - we discovered that we are inside a .git directory, and therefore
> > take it to be bare (and thus there is no work tree, and we cannot be
> > inside it). This is what happens in Elliott's original example that
> > behaves differently than the $GIT_WORK_TREE case.
> >
> > I'd be tempted to say that "inside the work tree" is further clarified
> > to "not inside the $GIT_DIR".
>
> Yes, I think that's reasonable. But...
>
> > > However, the case above also gives:
> > >
> > > $ GIT_WORK_TREE=.. git rev-parse --is-inside-git-dir
> > > false
> > > $ test $(pwd) = $(GIT_WORK_TREE=.. git rev-parse --git-dir); echo $?
> > > 0
> > >
> > > so even though $PWD *is* the Git directory, we're not in the Git
> > > directory! Setting GIT_DIR=$(pwd) makes no different to that.
> >
> > We seem to get that wrong. I'm also not sure if it would make sense if
> > you explicitly set the two to be equal, like:
> >
> > # checking in your own refs?
> > GIT_WORK_TREE=$(pwd) GIT_DIR=$(pwd) git add refs packed-refs
> >
> > So the current behavior may just be weird-but-true.
>
> This case definitely feels wrong:
>
> $ GIT_WORK_TREE=$(cd ..; pwd) GIT_DIR=$(pwd) git rev-parse
> --is-inside-git-dir
> false
>
> Shouldn't that be the same as if GIT_WORK_TREE and GIT_DIR aren't set?
> (It's also potentially surprising since "git rev-parse --git-dir" does
> give the right answer in this case.)
>
> If GIT_WORK_TREE points somewhere unrelated then it is correct:
>
> $ GIT_WORK_TREE=/tmp GIT_DIR=$(pwd) git rev-parse --is-inside-git-dir
> true
It seems that this is a result of changing the working directory to the
root of the working tree if we're inside it. is_inside_dir() doesn't
take account of startup_info->prefix and changing to:
real_path(startup_info->prefix)
instead of xgetcwd() means that these tests are less surprising.
But I haven't run the test suite or thought about what else this could
break.
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