On Fri, May 13, 2011 at 7:56 AM, Andrew Lutomirski <luto@xxxxxxx> wrote: > > So what I really want is a fancy version of git bisect that makes no > assumptions about the relationship of good and bad commits in the > graph and just finds me a commit that is bad but for which all parents > are good or vice versa. Ehh. That's the "non-fancy" way of testing, I'm afraid: if you cannot make assumption about the relationship between good and bad commits, then you have to test _every_ commit. So yes, bisection has its problems. But they really do come from the fact that it's very efficient. When you have (on average) about ten thousand commits between releases, you have to make assumptions about the relationships. But once you do that, the efficiency also results in a certain fragility. Think of it as a compression method: it generates the smallest possible set of test points for you. But it's a "lossy" compression - you don't test everything. And it's extreme: it boils down 10k commit events to about 13 bisection events. If anything goes wrong (like the bug not being entirely repeatable, or the bug comes and goes), it will give the wrong answer. The good news is that _usually_ it works really well. And when the choice is between "works really well for 10k commits but can have problems" and "you need to test all 10k commits", the "can have problems" part turns out to be a pretty small downside ;) Linus -- 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