Am 23.07.2014 13:53, schrieb Duy Nguyen: > On Wed, Jul 23, 2014 at 2:35 AM, René Scharfe <l.s.r@xxxxxx> wrote: >> Am 21.07.2014 16:13, schrieb Duy Nguyen: >> >>> This function tests if $PWD is the same as getcwd() using st_dev and >>> st_ino. But on Windows these fields are always zero >>> (mingw.c:do_lstat). If cwd is moved away, I think falling back to $PWD >>> is wrong. I don't understand the use of $PWD in the first place. >>> 1b9a946 (Use nonrelative paths instead of absolute paths for cloned >>> repositories - 2008-06-05) does not explain much. >> >> >> The commit message reads: >> >> Particularly for the "alternates" file, if one will be created, we >> want a path that doesn't depend on the current directory, but we want >> to retain any symlinks in the path as given and any in the user's view >> of the current directory when the path was given. >> >> The intent of the patch seems to be to prefer $PWD if it points to the same >> directory as the one returned by getcwd() in order to preserve "the user's >> view". That's why it introduces make_nonrelative_path() (now called >> absolute_path()), in contrast to make_absolute_path() (now called >> real_path()). >> >> I imagine it's useful e.g. if your home is accessed through a symlink: >> >> /home/foo -> /some/boring/mountpoint >> >> Then real_path("bar") would give you "/some/boring/mountpoint/bar", while >> absolute_path("bar") returned "/home/foo/bar". Not resolving symlinks keeps >> the path friendly in this case. And it keeps working even after the user's >> home is migrated to /a/bigger/partition and /home/foo is updated >> accordingly. > > If it's saved back, then yes it's useful. And I think that's the case > in clone.c. I was tempted to remove this code (because it only works > if you stand at worktree's root dir anyway, else cwd is moved) but I > guess we can just disable this code on Windows only instead. > It is disabled on Windows as of 7d092adc get_pwd_cwd(): Do not trust st_dev/st_ino blindly -- 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