On 11-02-23 02:07 PM, Jay Soffian wrote: > On Wed, Feb 23, 2011 at 12:11 PM, Johan Herland <johan@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> A colleague suggested instead that Git should notice that the collision >> will occur, and work around the failure to represent the repository >> objects in the file system with a one-to-one match. Either by checking >> out only _one_ of the colliding files, or by using a non-colliding name >> for the second file. After all, Git already has functionality for >> manipulating the file contents on checkout (CRLF conversion). Doesn't >> it make sense to add functionality for manipulating the _directory_ >> contents on checkout as well? Even if that makes sense, I'm not sure >> that implementing it will be straightforward. >> >> Are there better suggestions on how to deal with this? > > The general problem is aliasing in the working-tree, of which > case-insenitivity is the most common form, but it also happens due to > HFS's use of NFD. A search on gmane for "insensitive" or "nfd" will > return many hits. > > I think the argument against remapping filenames is that it doesn't > really help the user. > > Let's say (for the sake of argument) that git supported remapping > between the index and the working-tree. Further, my repo has: > > $ cat Foo.c > #include "Foo.h" > > $ cat foo.c > #include "foo.h" > > And on a case-insensitive file-system, git has remapped foo.[ch] to > foo~2.[ch] for the purposes of avoiding collisions on checkout. > > The checkout can't be compiled correctly, so what's the point of even > allowing it? In our case it would be useful to still have that checkout because the people working on the case-insensitive systems are dealing with a different part of the tree and don't care about the part with the collision. A build designed to exploit case-sensitivity obviously won't work on a case-insensitive system, but there's no reason to expect a git repo to have a single, monolithic build. There are a couple of parts of our code tree -- parts that are out of our control -- that use case sensitive file names, but most of it doesn't. It would be good if git would allow people on case-insensitive systems to work with the repository, if not the complete build. I suggest: 1. Git should emit a warning when checking out a case-colliding file (or directory) on a case-insensitive system. I don't really care _what_ gets checked out for that file -- whatever it is ain't gonna work anyway. Let's say it checks out the associated blob the first time it runs across thing.foo, but then emits the warning when it tries to check out Thing.Foo. 2. Git should forbid (yes, *forbid*) a user on a case-insensitive system from adding any change to any files stored in the repository under case-conflicting names. The error message should basically be "You need to use a case-sensitive system to work on this file." 3. I'm OK with git allowing case-insensitive users to forcibly delete case-conflicting files. "git rm thing.foo" should, on case-insensitive systems, fail and display all case-colliding names for [tT][hH][iI][nN][gG].[fF][oO][oO], and tell the user to use -f if they really want to delete *all* those files. M. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe git" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html