Hi Peff, On Sat, 17 Nov 2018, Jeff King wrote: > On Fri, Nov 16, 2018 at 08:22:11PM +0100, Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason wrote: > > > So maybe we should just document this interface better. It seems one > > implicit dependency is that we expect a manpage for the tool to exist > > for --help. > > Yeah, I think this really the only problematic assumption. The rest of > "-c", "--git-dir", etc, are just manipulating the environment, and that > gets passed through to sub-invocations of Git (so if I have a script > which calls git-config, it will pick up the "-c" config). > > It would be nice if there was a way to ask "is there a manpage?", and > fallback to running "git-cmd --help". But: > > 1. I don't think there is a portable way to query that via man. And > anyway, depending platform and config, it may be opening a browser > to show HTML documentation (or I think even texinfo?). > > 2. We can just ask whether "man git-sizer" (or whatever help display > command) returned a non-zero exit code, and fall back to "git-sizer > --help". But there's an infinite-loop possibility here: running > "git-sizer --help" does what we want. But if "man git-log" failed, > we'd run "git-log --help", which in turn runs "git help log", which > runs "man git-log", and so on. > > You can break that loop with an environment variable for "I already > tried to show the manpage", which would I guess convert "--help" to > "-h". > > So it's maybe do-able, but not quite as trivial as one might hope. A trivial alternative would be to recommend adding a man page for 3rd-party git-<tool>s. In other words, as soon as `git-sizer` is accompanied by `git-sizer.1` in one of the appropriate locations, it is set. (Actually, it is not: on Windows, it would have to add git-sizer.html in the appropriate location, but we can deal with this if needed.) > > But I don't remember the details, and can't reproduce it now with: > > > > $ cat ~/bin/git-sigint > > #!/usr/bin/env perl > > $SIG{INT} = sub { warn localtime . " " . $$ }; > > sleep 1 while 1; > > $ git sigint # or git-sigint > > [... behaves the same either way ...] > > > > So maybe it was something else, or I'm misremembering... > > I think that generally works because hitting ^C is going to send SIGINT > to the whole process group. A more interesting case is: > > git sigint & > kill -INT $! > > There $! is a parent "git" process that is just waiting on git-sigint to > die. But that works, too, because the parent relays common signals due > to 10c6cddd92 (dashed externals: kill children on exit, 2012-01-08). So > you might have been remembering issues prior to that commit (or uncommon > signals; these come from sigchain_push_common). FWIW I do have a couple of scripts I use that I install into `$HOME/bin/git-<tool>`. Although, granted, I essentially switched to aliases for most of them, where the aliases still call a script that is checked out in some folder in my home directory. The reason: this works in more circumstances, as I do not have to add `$HOME/bin` to the `PATH`, say, in PowerShell. So YMMV with git-<tool>s. My rule of thumb is: if I want to use this myself only, I'll make it an alias. If I want to ship it (e.g. with Git for Windows), I'll make it a git-<tool>. Ciao, Dscho