Re: [BUG] git-submodule has bash-ism?

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On Wed, Jun 01, 2016 at 12:45:11PM -0700, Junio C Hamano wrote:
> John Keeping <john@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes:
> 
> > On Wed, Jun 01, 2016 at 03:07:59PM -0400, Jeff King wrote:
> >> On Wed, Jun 01, 2016 at 07:31:00PM +0100, John Keeping wrote:
> >> 
> >> > > >  reset_submodule_urls () {
> >> > > > -	local root
> >> > > > -	root=$(pwd) &&
> >> > > >  	(
> >> > > > +		root=$(pwd) &&
> >> > > >  		cd super-clone/submodule &&
> >> > > >  		git config remote.origin.url "$root/submodule"
> >> > > >  	) &&
> >> > > >  	(
> >> > > > +		root=$(pwd) &&
> >> > > >  		cd super-clone/submodule/sub-submodule &&
> >> > > >  		git config remote.origin.url "$root/submodule"
> >> > [...]
> >> > I wonder if it's relevant that the "local root" line isn't &&-chained?
> >> > Is it possible that on some shells we ignore an error but everything
> >> > still works?
> >> 
> >> I don't think so. We're inside a function, so we wouldn't affect any
> >> outer &&-chaining in the function (and there isn't any in the caller
> >> anyway). I think it's a reasonable custom not to bother &&-chaining
> >> "local" lines, as they come at the top of a function and can't fail.
> >
> > Can't fail if the shell supports "local", but if we're in a shell that
> > doesn't support it, then the lack of "&&" may allow us to just carry on.
> 
> True, but if "to just carry on" were a correct behaviour, then
> wouldn't that mean that "local" was unnecessary, i.e. the variable
> did not have to get localized because stomping on the global name
> would not affect later reference to the same variable made by the
> caller?
> 
> If the clobbering of a global variable breaks the behaviour of the
> script, wouldn't we rather want to catch that fact?
> 
> So either way, I do not think "local variable names" that breaks
> &&-chain can be justified.  Either the variable must be localized
> for the script to work correctly, in which case we want local with
> &&-chaining, or it does not have to, in which case we do not want to
> have "local" that is not necessary, no?

Absolutely, my original point should have been prefixed with: I wonder
if the reason we haven't had any problems reported is because ...

And we've got lucky because the clobbering of global variables happens
not to matter in these particular cases.
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