On Tue, Aug 19, 2014 at 04:05:21PM +1000, Babak M wrote: > I saw that if a hook file is present in .git/hooks and it does not > have execution permissions it is silently ignored. > > I thought it might be worthwhile issuing a warning such as "Warning: > pre-commit hook exists but it cannot be executed due to insufficient > permissions". > > Not sure if this has been discussed before. I searched the archive but > didn't see anything. > > Thoughts, suggestions? Is there anything like that already? Once upon a time we shipped sample hooks with their execute bits turned off, and such a warning would have been very bad. These days we give them a ".sample" extension (because Windows installs had trouble with the execute bit :) ), so I think it should be OK in theory. Installing a new version of git on top of an old one with "make install" does not clean up old files. So somebody who has continuously upgraded their git via "make install" to the same directory would have the old-style sample files. Under your proposal, they would get a lot of warnings. However, that change came in v1.6.0, just over 6 years ago. We can probably discount that (and if it does happen, maybe it is time for that someone to clean up the other leftover cruft from past git installs). -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