Hi, There seems to be problems with the checks in the git code for conflicts between config values of core.autocrlf and core.eol. Because the various config files are read in separate passes, and the conflict check happens on the fly, it creates a situation where the order of the config file entries matters. This seems like a bug or at least a POLA violation -- ordering of lines within a section of a config file is not usually significant. Example: User has core.autocrlf=input in his ~/.gitconfig. In his project-level .git/config he wants to set core.autocrlf=false and core.eol=crlf. If the core.autocrlf=false comes first, then all is well and no conflict is reported. If the core.eol=crlf line comes first, then at the time this line is getting parsed, core.autocrlf is still set at "input" from ~/.gitconfig, and execution aborts: error: core.autocrlf=input conflicts with core.eol=crlf It seems like the conflict check should be made at the end of the config file parsing, not on the fly. I was tempted to create a patch, however I am unfamilar with the codebase, and didn't understand all the places where the config file parsing is called, so I'm not sure of the ramifications of any proposed change. A benefit of the current approach is that it reports the line number where it aborted in the config file. Trying to retain this and at the same time defer the check until the end could get complicated. Besides interaction between multiple levels of config files, the same sort of ordering issue can arise in conjunction with command-line config overrides. Example: User has core.autocrlf=input in his project-level .git/config. This command works fine: $ git -c core.autocrlf=false -c core.eol=crlf status This command blows up with conflict error: $ git -c core.eol=crlf -c core.autocrlf=false status I tested with git versions 1.9.3 and 2.1.0. Alex -- 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