On Mon, Sep 17, 2018 at 07:29:26PM +0200, Duy Nguyen wrote: > > On the other hand, if I am keeping some change that should never be > > in a commit in the working tree file, and building the contents in > > the index using "add -p" to incrementally, it would be the same > > disaster as you are trying to prevent if I by mistake did a whole > > path 'add', even if I catch myself doing so before running 'commit' > > i.e. > > > > edit X > > git add -p X > > git diff --cached X > > git diff X > > ... repeat the above number of times ... > > git add X ;# OOPS! > > git add . ;# OOPS! even worse! > > > > Even though this does not involve "git commit -a" or "git commit X", > > an unrecoverable damage that requires redoing the manual work is > > already done. > > I don't see a good way to get to recover this situation. I could go > back to the "index log" idea, where we keep a log of index changes (or > just "interesting" changes). That way there's no behavior change at > all. The user who accidentally updates/deletes something can always > retrieve the old content back (assuming that they realize quickly > since we can't keep very long log). FWIW, I like that approach much better, since: 1. It does not bother or restrict anybody in their workflow; instead, they pay the complexity price only when they know they have made a mistake. 2. It covers many more cases (e.g., just doing the wrong thing via "add -p"). A naive index log would be pretty cheap in CPU, at least for POSIX-ish systems. You could just hard link "index" to "index.N" before renaming "index.lock" over "index". But I guess if you have a gigantic index, that's less appealing. So maybe storing the equivalent of a "--raw" diff between the two index states would make more sense (and after all, you don't really need the stat-cache or cache-tree). It would cost more to reconstruct the index on the fly, but then the point is that you would create these logs a lot more than you access them. > I've been thinking about allowing to undo worktree changes too (e.g. > accidental "git reset --hard") and this log can cover it as well. I like that, too. It's a little more costly just because it may involve object-db writes, but I think in most cases it would be fine. I almost always "git stash" away discarded changes these days instead of "git reset --hard", because it effectively provides this kind of log. > The only downside is we need a new command for the UI (or perhaps I > can just add "git add --log" or something like that). I think the reflog approach has been successful: give these intermediate states a name. So in theory I could do something like: git checkout -p :@{2.minutes.ago} though it would probably be useful to be able to walk the states, too, just like we have "log --reflog-walk". The syntax above is off-the-cuff (and based on the ":<stage>" index syntax). I guess if we had a separate log for "stuff in the worktree that got thrown away by reset" we might need a separate syntax. > Should I just drop this patch and go that direction instead? More > work, but maybe better end result. I guess my whole response is a long-winded "yes". ;) -Peff