Learning from example by Steven Grimm, let me share a success story. Earlier I noticed that "fsck --full" from 'master' took forever in linux-2.6 repository, but the one from 'maint' finished in 2 to 3 minutes. We recently had a few enhancements by Christian Couder to git-bisect, and this was a perfect opportunity to see how well they worked: (1) "git bisect start" now takes one bad and then one or more good commits, before suggesting the first revision to try. Traditionally, immediately after you gave a bad and a good commit, it did a single bisection and then a checkout. This avoids repeated bisect computation and checkout when you know more than one good revisions before starting to bisect, and also let you bootstrap with a single command (you could instead give one good commit at a time and then finally a single bad commit to avoid the waste). Not only I know 'maint' is good, I also know that the tips of "foreign projects" merged to git.git, that do not share any codepath the fsck takes, are irrelevant to the problem. So I want to mark tips of commit ancestry I merged from git-gui projects as good. Hence: $ git bisect start master maint remotes/git-gui/master Mnemonic. Start takes a Bad before Goods, because B comes before G. (2) "git bisect run <script>" takes a script to judge the goodness of the given revision. Because I know each round of test takes around 3 minutes, I wrote a little script to automate the process and gave it to "git bisect run": $ git bisect run ./+run-script This ran for a while (I do not know how long it took -- I was away from the machine and doing other things) and came back with the "object decoration" one Linus has fixed yesterday with his patch. Here is the "+run-script". I have git.git repository and linux-2.6 repository next to each other. -- >8 -- #!/bin/sh # Build errors are not what I am interested in. make git-fsck && cd ../linux-2.6 || exit 255 # We are checking if it stops in a reasonable amount of time, so # let it run in the background... ../git.git/git-fsck --full >:log 2>&1 & # ... and grab its process ID. fsck=$! # ... and then wait for sufficiently long. sleep 240 # ... and then see if the process is still there. if kill -0 $fsck then # It is still running -- that is bad. # Three-kill is just a ritual and has no real meaning. # It is like "sync;sync;sync;reboot". kill $fsck; sleep 1; kill $fsck; sleep 1; kill $fsck; exit 1 else # It has already finished (the $fsck process was no more), # and we are happy. exit 0 fi - 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