Re: What's in a name? Let's use a (uuid,name,email) triplet

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On Fri, 19 Mar 2010, Michael Witten wrote:

On Fri, Mar 19, 2010 at 02:41, Michael Haggerty <mhagger@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Michael Witten wrote:
Rather than use a (name,email) pair to identify people, let's use
a (uuid,name,email) triplet.
[...]

A UUID doesn't need to be a big hex number.  All it has to be is a
"Universally Unique Identifier".  Like, oh, for example, your

                  *** EMAIL ADDRESS ***

[1].  There is even already a way to fix up mistakes or unavoidable
email address changes, namely the .mailmap file.

*facepalm*

You've just repeated everything that I've said; go look at the rest of
the thread, where I spend plenty of time correcting the same hangups
about my choice of the word UUID and my use of hex digits.

I'm only observing that the current name/email system pair conflates
an individual with his current email system and that it would be
worthwhile to ALLOW an individual to FURTHER describe himself by
including another piece of information that is solely meant as
identification within git. That piece of information could be whatever
a user deems to be uniquely identifying for himself. You could use
"Michael Haggerty <mhagger@xxxxxxxxxxxx>" as your uuid, and you could
still use it after you change the `email' config variable to something
else.

There is MUCH LESS CHANCE of such a uuid getting trashed by typos,
changing names, and changing email addresses; of course it can still
get messed up, but the rate at which something like .mailmap would
need to be updated would likely be greatly decreased and it would make
gathering statistics easier (especially for the individuals who take
advantage of such a uuid for describing themselves---and it only
requires setting one config variable to something easily remembered by
that person).

here is where you are missing the point.

no, there is not 'much less chance' of it getting messed up.

you seem to assume that people would never need to set the UUID on multiple machines.

if they don't need to set it on multiple machines, then the e-mail/userid is going to be reliable anyway

if they do need to set it on multiple machines and can't be bothered to keep their e-mail consistant, why would they bother keeping this additional thing considtant? Linus is pointing out that people don't care now about their e-mail and name, and will care even less about some abstract UUID

people who care will already make their e-mail consistant.

David Lang


I cover all of this numerous times in numerous rebuttals; don't
contribute to a thread with more than 60 emails without having read at
least some of them. If you don't care to read so much, then perhaps
jump here:

   http://marc.info/?l=git&m=126894679711600&w=2

In the end, there is probably only one legitimate problem with my
proposal: It might break compatibility with older repo formats/tools.
I'm not sure about that.

Sincerely,
Michael Witten
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