William Giokas <1007380@xxxxxxxxx> writes: > All, > > I've been using git for a while and this is the first time I've had to > use `git am` and I've got a 16 patch patchset that I'm looking to apply. > The files were copied to a separate maildir by mutt to keep things > clean, and then I ran `git am -i /path/to/maildir/` expecting things to > start from the patch with the subject > > [PATCH 01/16] refactor common code in query_search/sync_search > > But instead, it starts with the 16/16 patch and works backwards, which, > obviously, breaks the application process as the patches depend on each > other. I looked in the maildir directory just to see if the file names > were backwards, and that's not the issue. I talked to `gitster` on IRC > and he said to send in a bug report on this issue here. The patchset I'm > trying to apply can be found here[0]. > > Process to reproduce: > * find a multi-patch set with interdependent patches > * run `git am` on the maildir containing these patches > > Expected result: > * Apply patches in [01..N] order > > Actual result: > * Patches applied in [N N-1..01] order Note to bystanders. This is coming from populate_maildir_list() in builtin/mailsplit.c; the function claims to know what "maildir" should look like, so it should be enforcing the ordering as necessary by sorting the list, _if_ the implicit ordering given by string_list_insert() is insufficient. It also is likely that it is a user error to expect that patch e-mails are received and stored in the maildir in the order they were sent, or it could be "mutt" copying the mails in the order the messages were originally received, or something silly like that. > > [0]: https://mailman.archlinux.org/pipermail/pacman-dev/2013-March/016541.html > > Thank you, -- 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