On Fri, Jul 11, 2014 at 10:24:07AM -0700, Jacob Keller wrote: > Updated to include changes due to Junio's feedback. This has not resolved > whether we should fail on a configuration error or simply warn. It appears that > we actually seem to error out more than warn, so I am unsure what the correct > action is here. Yeah, we're quite inconsistent there. In some cases we silently ignore something unknown (e.g., a color.diff.* slot that we do not understand), but in most cases if it is a config key we understand but a value we do not, we complain and die. It's probably user-unfriendly to be silent for those cases, though. The user gets no feedback on why their config value is doing nothing. I tend to think that warning is not much better than erroring out. It is helpful if you are running a single-shot of an old version (which is something that I do a lot when testing old versions), but would quickly become irritating if you were actually using an old version of git day-to-day. I dunno. Maybe it is worth making life easier for people in the former category. > +static int parse_sort_string(const char *arg, int *sort) > +{ > + int type = 0, flags = 0; > + > + if (skip_prefix(arg, "-", &arg)) > + flags |= REVERSE_SORT; > + > + if (skip_prefix(arg, "version:", &arg) || skip_prefix(arg, "v:", &arg)) > + type = VERCMP_SORT; > + else > + type = STRCMP_SORT; > + > + if (strcmp(arg, "refname")) > + return error(_("unsupported sort specification %s"), arg); > + > + *sort = (type | flags); > + > + return 0; > +} Regardless of how we handle the error, I think this version that assembles the final bitfield at the end is easier to read than the original. -Peff -- 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