On Mon, Oct 28, 2013 at 11:10 PM, Thomas Rast <tr@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Johan Herland <johan@xxxxxxxxxxx> writes: >> But I still don't see exactly what this option should do (inside "git >> commit") that would end up being useful across most/all projects, and >> not just something that could more easily be implemented in the >> *commit-msg hooks for relevant projects. > > [Ok, admittedly I don't really know what to quote from your message, > since I'm mostly responding to the overall concept.] > > I like the idea of putting all that in hooks, but I have two > observations: > > * Signed-off-by: is already such a case (and was probably also added for > the kernel?) that _could_ have been dealt with using {prepare-,}commit-msg, > but has its own support in various git tools. Yes, and I don't like using the precedent of "Signed-off-by" as an argument to push support for more (IMHO project-specific) footers into core Git. Hence, I'd rather see the "Signed-off-by" reimplemented as a hook (obviously, the -s option for "git commit" would have to remain for backward-compatibility). > * In your list > >> Fixes: >> Reported-by: >> Suggested-by: >> Improved-by: >> Acked-by: >> Reviewed-by: >> Tested-by: >> Signed-off-by: > > and I might add > > Cherry-picked-from: > Reverts: > > if one were to phrase that as a footer/pseudoheader, observe that > there are only two kinds of these: footers that contain identities, > and footers that contain references to commits. I'm not so sure we can make those assumptions. One might conceivably imagine a "Fixes:" footer that refers to a bug ID, and not a commit. Also, projects might want to apply different rules on what may appear in which footer. E.g. one could e.g. want to enforce that the ident listed in "Reviewed-by:" or "Signed-off-by:" must always appear in a project-specific REVIEWERS.txt or AUTHORS.txt file. Since we don't really know what projects might want, we shouldn't make too many assumptions on how these footers will be used... That said, I am not (or at least no longer) opposed to generic support in core Git for processing these footers, as long as that support is flexible/generic in nature, and equally available to be reused from within hooks as from within core Git. > So why not support these use-cases? We could have something like > footer.foo.* configuration, e.g. > > [footer "fixes"] > type = commit > suggest = true > [footer "acked-by"] > type = identity > > where 'suggest' (please suggest a better name) means that git-commit > will put a blank one in the commit message template for you to fill in. > 'commit' and 'identity' can have some elementary expansion and > validation tied to them. Some easy extensiblity (hooks?) might not > hurt, but then as you point out, the existing hooks already cover that. > > Perhaps we could also have, for Gerrit (cf. [1]): > > [footer "change-id"] > type = uuid > > though admittedly I haven't investigated if it's okay to just put a > random string there, or it needs to have a specific value. > > [1] http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/236429 How the config ends up looking is not actually that interesting to me (not at this stage, at least). My objection is to adding support for specific footers with specific interpretations tailored specifically for one (or a few) projects. Such things only open the door to more bloat. Instead, we already have the hooks for implementing such project-specific rules and conventions. This is the core of my argument. Since then, the discussion has moved towards generic and flexible support for commonly-used footers, and I don't really have a problem with that, as long as it is easily reusable (and extensible) by a project's own hooks. ...Johan -- Johan Herland, <johan@xxxxxxxxxxx> www.herland.net -- 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