On Tue, 20 Sep 2016 19:15:33 -0400 Jeff King <peff@xxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Tue, Sep 20, 2016 at 05:09:54PM +0200, Leandro Lucarella wrote: > > > Hi, starting from 2.10.0 I noticed that when using git log > > --oneline, if commits are signed with GPG, now the signatures are > > printed too, and it takes 3 lines for the signature information + 1 > > line for the title of the commit, so suddenly --oneline became > > --fourline :) > > > > Is this really intended? > > I don't think anything has changed here in 2.10. Running "git log > --oneline --show-signature" has _always_ been horribly ugly. However, > 2.10 did introduce the "log.showsignature" config, which makes "git > log --oneline" pretty unusable when it is enabled. Ditto for > one-liner uses of "--format". Right! Now I remember, I changed my configuration when I read the release notes, before I upgraded. Now that I did upgrade I'm seeing the results. Anyway, yeah, using the new configuration makes --oneline pretty unusable, so ignoring that option for --oneline seems like a good idea. > I think we should probably ignore the config entirely when using any > of the one-liner formats (and I'd include --format, too, even though > it can sometimes be multi-line; it already has %GG to include that > information as appropriate). > > Another option would be to somehow represent the signature information > in the --oneline output, but I think I'd rather leave that for people > to experiment with using "--format". I think it might be nice to show the information in one line in a ver succinct way, like just showing a green unicode check mark (✓) or a red cross mark (❌) if it failed (or just colour the commit subject in green/red if a signature is present and is passing/failing). Thanks! -- Leandro Lucarella Technical Development Lead Sociomantic Labs GmbH <http://www.sociomantic.com>