On Fri, Apr 27, 2018 at 5:29 PM, Tang (US), Pik S <Pik.S.Tang@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Hi, > > I discovered that I was able to delete the feature branch I was in, due to some fat fingering on my part and case insensitivity. I never realized this could be done before. A quick google search did not give me a whole lot to work with... > > Steps to reproduce: > 1. Create a feature branch, "editCss" > 2. git checkout master > 3. git checkout editCSS > 4. git checkout editCss > 5. git branch -d editCSS > Are you running on a case-insensitive file system? What version of git? I thought I recalled seeing commits to help avoid creating branches of the same name with separate case when we know we're on a file system which is case-insensitive.. > Normally, it should have been impossible for a user to delete the branch they're on. And the deletion left me in a weird state that took a while to dig out of. > > I know this was a user error, but I was also wondering if this was a bug. If we have not yet done this, I think we should. Long term this would be fixed by using a separate format to store refs than the filesystem, which has a few projects being worked on but none have been put into a release. Thanks, Jake > > > Thanks, > > Pik Tang >