On Tue, Mar 7, 2017 at 12:47 AM, Jeff King <peff@xxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Mon, Mar 06, 2017 at 02:44:27PM -0800, Stefan Beller wrote: > >> > +static int include_condition_is_true(const char *cond, size_t cond_len) >> > +{ >> ... >> > + >> > + error(_("unrecognized include condition: %.*s"), (int)cond_len, cond); >> > + /* unknown conditionals are always false */ >> > + return 0; >> > +} >> >> Thanks for putting an error message here. I was looking at what >> is currently queued as origin/nd/conditional-config-include, >> which doesn't have this error() (yet / not any more?) > > It's "not any more". It was in the original and I asked for it to be > removed during the last review. Okay. The joys of contradicting opinions on a mailing list. :) > >> I'd strongly suggest to keep the error message here as that way >> a user can diagnose e.g. a typo in the condition easily. >> >> If we plan to extend this list of conditions in the future, and a user >> switches between versions of git, then they may see this message >> on a regular basis (whenever they use the 'old' version). > > That would make it unlike the rest of the config-include mechanism > (which quietly ignores things it doesn't understand, like include.foo, > or include.foo.path), as well as the config code in general (which > ignores misspelt keys). > > Some of that "quiet when you don't understand it" is historical > necessity. Older versions _can't_ complain about not knowing > include.path, because they don't yet know it's worth complaining about. agreed > Likewise here, if this ships in v2.13 and a new condition "foo:" ships > in v2.14, you get: > > v2.12 - no complaint; we don't even understand includeIf at all > v2.13 - complain; we know includeIf, but not "foo:" > v2.14 - works as expected > > Which is kind of weird and inconsistent. But maybe the typo-detection > case is more important to get right than consistency across historical > versions. Oh, I see. I was contemplating a future in which 2.12 is not used anymore. When looking at other examples, such as url.<...>.insteadOf we also do not warn about typos (well we can't actually). In diff.<driver>.(command/binary/..) we know the limited set of drivers, which is similar to the situation we have here. Maybe a compromise between typo checking (edit distance < 2 -> warn; silent for larger distances) and the consistency over time is desired. But this is even more code to write. So for now I retract my strong opinion and be happy with what is presented as-is for the reasons Peff gave. Thanks, Stefan