On 11/09/2013 01:23, Junio C Hamano wrote:
Kevin Bracey <kevin@xxxxxxxxx> writes:
On 10/09/2013 20:19, Junio C Hamano wrote:
This command
$ git log v1.8.3.1..v1.8.4 -- git-cvsserver.perl
reports that a merge 766f0f8ef7 (which did not touch the specified
path at all) touches it.
Bisecting points at d0af663e (revision.c: Make --full-history
consider more merges, 2013-05-16).
That merge appearing *with* --full-history would seem like correct
behaviour to me. Or at least it's what I intended.
... But it shouldn't
appear if the user does not ask for "--full-history".
Well, there is a functioning semi-work-around for now: avoid difficult
non-linear questions like "v1.8.3.1..v1.8.4". A question like
"v1.8.3..v1.8.4" is a lot easier to visualise, and it does already omit
the merge.
On reflection I'm not sure what we should for the "simple history" view
of v1.8.3.1..v1.8.4. We're not rewriting parents, so we don't get a
chance to reconsider the merge as being zero-parent, and we do have this
little section of graph to traverse at the bottom:
1.8.3
o----x----x----x----x---x--- (x = included, o =
excluded, *=!treesame)
/
/*
o--x--x--x--x
In effect, we do have a linear section of history to follow, and the
file does change in the middle of that line. It may be quite hard to
come up with a solid rule to hide the merge that doesn't go wrong
somewhere else.
The current rules for this are
1) if identical to any on-graph parent, follow that one, and rewrite the
merge as a non-merge. We currently do not follow to an identical
off-graph parent. This long-standing comment in try_to_simplify_commit
applies: "Even if a merge with an uninteresting side branch brought the
entire change we are interested in, we do not want to lose the other
branches of this merge, so we just keep going." For this query, the
mainline link to 1.8.3 is the "uninteresting side branch"! If you do
specify v1.8.3..v1.8.4, then v1.8.3 becomes "on-graph" thanks to other
new rules, and this rule does kick in, hiding the merge.
2) If rule 1 doesn't activate, and it remains as a merge, hide it if
treesame to all on-graph parents. Previously this rule was "hide if
treesame to any parent", and so that would have hidden the merge.
Now, when I changed rule 2, I did not think this would affect the
default log. See my commit message:
"Now redefine a commit's TREESAME flag to be true only if a commit is
TREESAME to _all_ of its [later: on-graph] parent. This doesn't
affect ... the default
simplify_history behaviour (because partially TREESAME merges are
turned
into normal commits)..."
Whoops - partially TREESAME merges are not always turned into normal
commits.
Maybe the fix is to define TREESAME differently for simplify_history -
to use the old definition of "identical to any parent" in that case. I'm
not sure that's right though.
I currently feel instinctively more disposed to dropping the older
"don't follow off-graph identical parents" rule. Let the default history
go straight to v1.8.3 even though it goes off the graph, stopping us
traversing the topic branch.
Kevin
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