On Wed, Jun 06, 2018 at 04:01:38PM -0400, Todd Zullinger wrote: > Thomas Fischer wrote: > > I agree that the entire chain of empty directories should not be tracked, as git tracks content, not files. > > > > However, when I run 'rm path/to/some/file', I expect path/to/some/ to still exist. > > > > Similarly, when I run 'git rm path/to/some/file', I expect path/to/some/ to exist, *albeit untracked*. > > > > I do NOT expect git to *track* empty directories. But I also do NOT expect it to remove untracked directories. > > It looks like this behavior has been in place for many > years, since d9b814cc97 ("Add builtin "git rm" command", > 2006-05-19). Interestingly, Linus noted in the commit > message that the removal of leading directories was > different than when git-rm was a shell script. And he > wondered if it might be worth having an option to control > that behavior. > > I imagine that most users either want the current behavior > or they rarely run across this and are surprised, given how > long git rm has worked this way. It's also consistent with other parts of Git that remove files. E.g., "git checkout" to a state that does not have the file will remove the leading directories (if they're empty, of course). > It does seem like something which could be noted in the git > rm docs. Perhaps you'd care to take a stab at a patch to > add a note to Documentation/git-rm.txt Thomas? Maybe a note > at the end of the DISCUSSION section? Yeah, agreed. -Peff