Junio C Hamano <gitster@xxxxxxxxx> writes: > Thomas Rast <trast@xxxxxxxxxxx> writes: > >> However, suppose we knew generation numbers. I haven't actually looked >> into the old threads again, but my understanding was that they are >> numbers g(C) attached to each commit C such that >> >> g(C) = 1 + max(g(P) for P a parent of C) for non-root commits >> >> g(C) = 0 for root commits >> >> They are invariant given the commit, so they can be cached. >> ... >> I hope I got that right. The order of commits is still entirely >> determined by the choice of "any tentative source", but the algorithm >> should now stream nicely once the generation numbers are known. > > That matches the definition of generation number I remember from the > old discussion. Now look at the illustration in this discussion > again: > > ---A---B---C---D > \ > ---1---2---3---4---* = HEAD [...] > The numbered commits 1 2 3 4 are building on top of recent "master", > while alphabetized A B C D are building on aged maintenance track. > The difference in generation numbers between 1 and 2, 2 and 3,... A > and B, B and C, C and D are all one, and HEAD (the tip of 'pu') would > have generation number of commit 4 plus 1, as commit 4's generation > number would be a thousand or more ahead of that of commit D. And > there are a thousand ancestors of '1' with larger generation numbers > than 'D'. > > When the user runs "git log" (i.e. the casual "the last few commit" > macthes), the expectation of the user is "I want to see what I did > recently". If you substituted the commit timestamp with such a > generation number, how would that expectation satisified? Umm, have you looked at the algorithm I proposed? It does not substitute the generation numbers for anything, let alone the date. It merely uses them to determine a point where it knows "enough" of the history to be able to emit the next commit; that is, where it can use the generation numbers to prove that no unknown commit can be a descendant of what it wants to emit next. It does *not* have to use the generation numbers in the final ordering of the commits. That final order is determined by how the algorithm chooses the next candidate commit. If you use a stack, it winds up being --topo-order. If you use a date-ordered priority queue, it becomes --date-order. So really, this is only about modifying the algorithm that generates the existing order to allow for streaming output as it reads through history. -- Thomas Rast trast@{inf,student}.ethz.ch -- 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