Jonathan Tan <jonathantanmy@xxxxxxxxxx> writes: > This is somewhat of a follow-up to my previous e-mail with subject > "[PATCH] sequencer: support folding in rfc2822 footer" [1], in which I > proposed relaxing the definition of a commit message footer to allow > multiple-line field bodies (as described in RFC2822), but its strictness > was deemed deliberate. It does not necessarily mean we can never change it when we did something deliberately, though. With a good enough justification, and with a transitition plan if the backward incompatibility is severe enough to warrant one, we can change things. I vaguely recall that there were some discussion on the definition of "what's a trailer line" with folks from the kernel land, perhaps while discussing the interpret-trailers topic. IIRC, when somebody passes an improved version along, the resulting message's trailer block may look like this: Signed-off-by: Original Author <original@xxxxxxxxx> [fixed typo in the variable names] Signed-off-by: Somebhody Else <somebody@xxxxxxx> and an obvious "wish" of theirs was to treat not just RFC2822-like "a line that begins with token followed by a colon" but also these short comments as part of the trailer block. Your original wish in [*1*] is to also treat "a line that begin with a whitespace that follows a line that begins with token followed by a colon" as part of the trailer block and I personally think that is a reasonable thing to wish for, too. I recall that I was somewhat surprised and dissapointed to see no change to interpret-trailers when you tried [*1*], which was really about improving the definition of what the trailer block is, by the way. In any case, if we want to improve what the trailer block is, we would certainly need to make sure what is inserted by "cherry-pick -x" is also considered as part of the trailer block, so it may be necessary to change it to "Cherry-picked-from: ..." while doing so. I dunno. > Below is a patch set that allows placing the "cherry picked from" line > without taking into account the definition of a commit message footer. > For example, "git cherry-pick -x" (with the appropriate configuration > variable or argument) would, to this commit message: > > commit title > > This is an explanatory paragraph. > > Footer: foo > > place the "(cherry picked from ...)" line below "commit title". > > Would this be better? It is not immediately obvious what such a change buys us. Wouldn't the current code place that line below "Footer: foo"? I cannot think of any reason why anybody would want to place "cherry-picked from" immediately below the title and before the first line of the body. [Footnotes] *1* http://public-inbox.org/git/1472846322-5592-1-git-send-email-jonathantanmy@xxxxxxxxxx/