Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s.dev@xxxxxx> writes: > The 25/08/12, Vicent Marti wrote: > >> The development of libgit2 happens 100% in the open. I don't know what >> "commercial entity" are you talking about, but there are several >> companies and independent contributors working on the Library at the >> moment. > > Right but as far as I'm aware of Junio had reserves about libgit2 > integration into git due to issues making repositories broken. Though, The comment I saw about that was that at one point libgit2 had produced broken trees; which is true, the algorithm for the almost-alphanumeric sorting was slightly broken. This was fixed quite some time ago, which he also mentioned in the same message. > [ I'm somewhat in the same situation of OP. ] If you wait for it to be perfect, it's never going to happen. If your application would benefit, port it to libgit2 and report the issues you find. That's the only way we can know of the odd edge cases and improvements that we should make. Note that the GitHub apps for Mac and Windows both use the Library to perform parts of their job. Their new backend for the website is also (going to be) based on libgit2. I am also working on a project for a client involving the Library for importing data and the only problem we've had is that we discovered an edge case regarding symlinks and an assumption that one of the bindings made wrt diffs, which is getting fixed. cmn -- 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