I just wrote up another double-idea that has been stewing in my head for a while: * Allow configuration values to be unset via a config file * Fix "git config --unset" to clean up detritus from sections that are left empty. These ideas are more "out there" than the last, and might be too controversial to be implemented, let alone as a GSoC project. I'd definitely like some feedback. And if you like this idea or the other one I proposed, please volunteer to be a co-mentor! I will be traveling for a few weeks this summer, so I *won't* be able to be the sole mentor to a student. I wrote up this idea in the following pull request: https://github.com/git/git.github.io/pull/6 I will also append the text, for your mailing-list-reading convenience. Michael ### `git config` improvements This project proposes the following two improvements to `git config`. Please note that this project has a significant "political" component to it, because some of the details of the features will be controversial. #### Unsetting configuration options Some Git configuration options have an effect by their mere existence. (I.e., setting the option to "false" or the empty string is different than leaving it unset altogether.) Also, some configuration options can take multiple values. However, there is no way for an option file to "unset" an option--that is, to change the option back to "unset". This is awkward, because configuration values are read from various places (`/etc/gitconfig`, `~/.config/git/config` or `~/.gitconfig`, and `$GIT_DIR/config`, plus perhaps files that are included by other configuration files). Therefore, if an option is set in one of the earlier files, there is no way for it to be unset in a later one. The unwanted option might have even been set in a file like `/etc/gitconfig` that the user doesn't have permission to modify. It would be nice to have a syntax that can be used to unset any previously-defined values for an option. Perhaps [section "subsection"] !option The above is currently currently a syntax error that causes Git to terminate, so some thought has to go into a transition plan for enabling this feature. Maybe a syntax has to be invented that conforms to the current format, like [unset] name = section.subsection.option Because options are currently processed as they are read, this change will require the code that reads options files to be changed significantly. Leave yourself a lot of time to attain a consensus on the mailing list about how this can be done while retaining reasonable backwards compatibility. #### Tidy configuration files When a configuration file is repeatedly modified, often garbage is left behind. For example, after git config my.option true git config --unset my.option git config my.option true git config --unset my.option the bottom of the configuration file is left with the useless lines [my] [my] It would be nice to clean up such garbage when rewriting the configuration file. This project is a bit tricky because of the possible presence of comments. For example, what if an empty section looks like this: [my] # This section is for my own private settings or this: [my] # This section is for my own private settings or this: # This section is for my own private settings: [my] ? In some such cases it might be desireable either to retain the section even though it is empty, or to delete the comment along with the section. Very likely there will be some obvious patterns when everybody agrees that an empty section can be deleted, and other, more controversial cases where you will have to reach a consensus on the mailing list about what should be done. - Language: C - Difficulty: medium - Possible mentors: Michael Haggerty -- Michael Haggerty mhagger@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://softwareswirl.blogspot.com/ -- 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