Hi, On 2015-05-15 19:03, Kelvin Li wrote: > On Fri, 2015-05-15 at 14:08 +0200, Matthieu Moy wrote: >> Pawel Por <porparek@xxxxxxxxx> writes: >> >> > At the beginning I'm sorry if this post is completely unrelated to >> > this mailing list. >> > I'm trying to find the base linux kernel version from which a patch >> > has been created and posted to LKML. >> > Most patches contain the index line. Is it the well known git index >> > (staging area) ? >> >> This is the id of the blob object corresponding to the _file_ being >> patched (index <from>..<to> <mode>). That's why you don't see it in git >> log: git log shows you ids for commit objects (which point to trees, >> which in turn points to blob). >> >> See Johannes' answer for how you can get some possible commits. >> > > Come to think of it, why is that line named "index"? Conceptually, this > "diff header index" seems distinct from the "staging area index", but > calling both "index" is confusing, in my opinion. > > Is there already a note about this in the docs somewhere? At the very > least, "git help diff" seems to happily use both senses of the word > without any acknowledgement that we're overloading it. By default, `git diff` works on the index, unless you force it to compare revisions or the working directory to a revision. I guess that is where the wording comes from. In any case, it is too late to change it now... Ciao, Johannes -- 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