Am 05.03.2013 22:17, schrieb Phil Hord: > On Tue, Mar 5, 2013 at 3:51 PM, Jens Lehmann <Jens.Lehmann@xxxxxx> wrote: >> Am 05.03.2013 19:34, schrieb Junio C Hamano: >>> Eric Cousineau <eacousineau@xxxxxxxxx> writes: >>>> ... >>> I am not entirely convinced we would want --include-super in the >>> first place, though. It does not belong to "submodule foreach"; >>> it is doing something _outside_ the submoudules. >> >> I totally agree with that. First, adding --include-super does not >> belong into the --post-order patch at all, as that is a different >> topic (even though it belongs to the same use case Eric has). Also >> the reason why we are thinking about adding the --post-order option >> IMO cuts the other way for --include-super: It is so easy to do >> that yourself I'm not convinced we should add an extra option to >> foreach for that, especially as it has nothing to do with submodules. >> So I think we should just drop --include-super. > > I agree it should not be part of this commit, but I've often found > myself in need of an --include-super switch. To me, > git-submodule-foreach means "visit all my .git repos in this project > and execute $cmd". It's a pity that the super-project is considered a > second-class citizen in this regard. Hmm, for me the super-project is a very natural second-class citizen to "git *submodule* foreach". But also I understand that sometimes the user wants to apply a command to superproject and submodules alike (I just recently did exactly that with "git gc" on our build server). > I have to do this sometimes: > > ${cmd} && git submodule foreach --recursive '${cmd}' > > I often forget the first part in scripts, though, and I've seen others > do it too. I usually create a function for it in git-heavy scripts. > > In a shell, it usually goes like this: > > git submodule foreach --recursive '${cmd}' > <up><home><del>{30-ish}<end><backspace><enter> > > It'd be easier if I could just include a switch for this, and maybe > even create an alias for it. But maybe this is different command > altogether. Are you sure you wouldn't forget to provide such a switch too? ;-) I'm still not convinced we should add a new switch, as it can easily be achieved by adding "${cmd} &&" to your scripts. And on the command line you could use an alias like this one to achieve that: [alias] recurse = !sh -c \"$@ && git submodule foreach --recursive $@\" -- 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