"Philip Oakley" <philipoakley@xxxxxxx> writes: >> > >"git checkout -b foo" (without -f -m or <start_point>) is defined in >> > >the manual as being a shortcut for/equivalent to: >> > > >> > > (1a) "git branch foo" >> > > (1b) "git checkout foo" >> > > >> > >However, it has been our experience in our observed use cases and all >> > >the existing git tests, that it can be treated as equivalent to: >> > > >> > > (2a) "git branch foo" >> > > (2b) "git symbolic-ref HEAD refs/heads/foo" >> > >... >> > > >> > I am still not sure if I like the change of what "checkout -b" is this >> > late in the game, though. >> >> ... >> That said, you're much more on the frontline of receiving negative >> feedback about doing that than I am. :) How would you like to >> proceed? > > I didn't see an initial confirmation as to what the issue really > was. You indicated the symptom ('a long checkout time'), but then we > missed out on hard facts and example repos, so that the issue was > replicable. I took it as a given, trivial and obvious optimization opportunity, that it is wasteful having to traverse two trees to consolidate and reflect their differences into the working tree when we know upfront that these two trees are identical, no matter what the overhead for doing so is. > At the moment there is the simple workaround of an alias that executes > that two step command dance to achieve what you needed, and Junio has > outlined the issues he needed to be covered from his maintainer > perspective (e.g. the detection of sparse checkouts). Confirming the > root causes would help in setting a baseline. > > I hope that is of help - I'd seen that the discussion had gone quiet. Some of the problems I have are: (1) "git checkout -b NEW", "git checkout", "git checkout HEAD^0" and "git checkout HEAD" (no other parameters to any of them) ought to give identical index and working tree. It is too confusing to leave subtly different results that will lead to hard to diagnose bugs for only one of them. (2) The proposed log message talks only about "performance optimization", while the purpose of the change is more about changing the definition of what "git checkout -b NEW" is from "git branch NEW && git checkout NEW" to "git branch NEW && git symbolic-ref HEAD refs/heads/NEW". The explanation in a Ben's later message <007401d21278$445eba80$cd1c2f80$@gmail.com> does a much better job contrasting the two. (3) I identified only one difference as an example sufficient to point out why the patch provided is not a pure optimization but behaviour change. Fixing that example alone to avoid change in the behaviour is trivial (see if the "info/sparse-checkout" file is present and refrain from skipping the proper checkout), but a much larger problem is that I do not know (and Ben does not, I suspect) know what other behaviour changes the patch is introducing, and worse, the checks are sufficiently dense too detailed and intimate to the implementation of unpack_trees() that it is impossible for anybody to make sure the exceptions defined in this patch and updates to other parts of the system will be kept in sync. So my inclination at this point, unless we see somebody invents a clever way to solve (3), is that any change that violates (1), i.e. as long as the patch does "Are we doing '-b NEW'? Then we do something subtly different", is not acceptable, and solving (3) in a maintainable way smells like quite a hard thing to do. But it would be ideal if (3) is solved cleanly, as we will then not have to worry about changing behaviour at all and can apply the optimization for all of the four cases equally. As a side effect, that approach would solve problem (2) above. If we were to punt on keeping the sanity (1) and introduce a subtly different "create a new branch and point the HEAD at it", an easier way out may be be one of 1. a totally new command, e.g. "git branch-switch NEW" that takes only a single argument and no other "checkout" options, or 2. a new option to "git checkout" that takes _ONLY_ a single argument and incompatible with any other option or command line argument, or 3. an alias that does "git branch" followed by "git symbolic-ref". Neither of the first two sounds palatable, though.