On Wed, May 30 2018, Junio C Hamano wrote: > Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@xxxxxxxxx> writes: > >> Before this change git will die on any unknown color.ui values: >> >> $ git -c color.ui=doesnotexist show >> fatal: bad numeric config value 'doesnotexist' for 'color.ui': invalid unit > > I do not think "unit" is correct, so there may be some room for > improvement. For _this_ particular case, I agree that it is not the > end of the world if we did not color the output (because we do not > know what the 'doesnotyetexist' token from the future is trying to > tell us), but as a general principle, we should diagnose and die, if > a misconfiguration is easy to correct. Many users (including myself) use the same ~/.gitconfig on many different machines with different git versions. Maybe at some point I'm willing to set the new setting to a value I know is supported on most of them, but it sucks at that point if I logging into 1-3% of old machines ends up killing git on any invocation. > than blindly go ahead and do random things that the end-user did not > expect by giving something we do not (but they thought they do) > understand. I think this is highly dependent on what variables we give this treatment. There may be some where we genuinely have no idea what they mean, but in this case and for http.sslVersion (which warns, doesn't die on unknown values) it's reasonable to assume that degrading to a known value is better than outright dying. > If we really want to introduce "here is a setting you may not > understand, in which case you may safely ignore", the right way to > do so is to follow the model the index extension took, where from > the syntax of the unknown thing an old/existing code can tell if it > is optional. Forcing all codepaths to forever ignore what they do > not understand and what they happen to think is a safe fallback is > simply being irresponsible---the existing code does not understand > the new setting so they do not even know if their "current > behaviour" as a fallback is a safe and sensible one from the point > of view of the person who asked for the feature from the future. This seems needlessly complex. color.ui is one of the most prominent config variales, so you're proposing we split it up into some dual-key arrangement and force all users to migrate? I think just following what we're doing with http.sslVersion makes more sense.