On Fri, Aug 11, 2017 at 10:48 AM, Jameson Miller <jameson.miller81@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > The set of files listed by "--ignored" changes when different > values are given to "--untracked-files". If would be nice to > be able to make the ignored output independent of the untracked > settings. This patch attempts to do that while maintaining > backward compatibility with the existing behavior. So after rereading this, maybe we could have '--ignored[=as-untracked, new-mode]' with as-untracked as default? This would satisfy your goal, while still maintaining backwards compatibility. > We want to see the paths that explicitly match an ignore pattern. > This means that if a directory only contains ignored files, but the > directory itself is not explicitly ignored, then we want to see the > individual files. This is slightly different than the current behavior > of "--ignored". > > I am open to suggestions on how to present the options to control > this behavior. I would strongly favor not introducing yet another flag to tweak the behavior of another command line option. (The UX of Git is already bloated, IMHO. But that is just my general stance on things) So we'd have two proposals: (1) The current patch proposes --show-ignored-directory that modifies the behavior of other flags (2) extend an already existing option to take another mode (which I propose) Strong arguments for (1) would be if the flag is orthogonal and apply to the other flags in a uniform way, i.e.: status --no-ignored --untracked=no --show-ignored-directory would make sense and produce an output that a user doesn't find confusing. Arguments for (2), are * less documentation for users (see below) * if the two flags are truly orthogonal, test effort is decreased * no exposure of an API that may yield strange results when the user gives strange input. >>> This >>> change exposes a flag to report all untracked files while not showing >>> individual files in ignored directories. >> >> By the description up to here, it sounds as if you want to introduce >> mode for --untracked, e.g. "normal-adjusted-for-ignored" (it's a bad >> suggestion)? However the patch seems to add an orthogonal flag, >> such that >> >> status --no-ignored --untracked=no --show-ignored-directory >> >> would also be possible. What is a reasonable expectation for >> the output of such? > > > The current patch does add another flag. This flag only has meaning if > the "--ignored" and "--untracked=all" flags are also specified. Another > option I had considered is to let the "--ignored" flag take an argument. I would think that is a better solution, as then untracked and ignored files (and their parameters) will be orthogonal in the long run. Things like --untracked=all --ignored=none --untracked=none --ignored=only-dirs --untracked=reasonable-default --ignored=other-reasonable-default will be possible and eventually the default for ignored files may be independent of untracked settings. > Then, we could express this new behavior through (for example) a > "--ignored=exact" flag to reflect the fact that this new option > returns paths that match the ignore pattern, and does not > collapse directories that contain only ignored files. Yes, and we would not need to worry about how the new flag interacts with other flags. I would prefer that solution as it seems the API will be cleaner that way. Less things depend on each other, e.g. as a user I do not need to know about the 'other' flag, be it ignored or untracked to solve my problem. If we'd go with this third flag, we'd need to (a) document it, but (b) also have to add a sentence to untracked and ignored flag "In the corner case of also having the third flag, we change behavior once again" which I'd dislike from a users perspective. >>> Commands: >>> 1) status >>> 2) status --ignored >>> 3) status --ignored --untracked-files=all >>> 4) status --ignored --untracked-files=all --show-ignored-directory >>> (2) is --untracked-files=normal I'd presume, such that this flag >>> can be understood as a tweak to "normal" based on the similar size >>> between 2 and 4? (The timing improvement from 2 to 4 is huge though). > > (2) is --untracked-files=normal. Although the count of ignored > files similar between 2 and 4, I consider this flag more of a > tweak on 3, as we want the untracked files reported with > the "--untracked=all" flag. The counts between 2 and 4 are > similar in this case because most of the ignored files are > contained in ignored directories. > > Our application calls status including the following flags: > > --porcelain=v2 --ignored --untracked-files=all --ignore-submodules=none > > This means we have bad performance compared to just "git status" > when there is a large number of files in ignored directories > With this new behavior, our application would move from case 3 to > case 4 for this repository. > > You also point out the timing difference between case 2 and 4. I > think there is an optimization we can make when running "git > status --ignored" logic that will improve the the timing > here. Currently, the logic in dir.c is iterating over all files > contained in an ignored directory to see if it is empty or > not. This is not necessary - we should be able to stop after > finding any file. I plan to follow up on this in a different > patch. Thanks!