On Fri, Jan 04, 2019 at 11:26:56AM -0800, Junio C Hamano wrote: > "brian m. carlson" <sandals@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes: > > >> - --dereference to control whether to follow symlinks > > > > This is actually surprisingly difficult. The reason I implemented this > > only for no-index mode is because there are actually several places we > > can stat a file in the diff code, and implementing a --dereference > > option that catches all of those cases and getting the option passed > > down to them is non-trivial. > > Another thing to worry about is symlinks that point outside the > working tree. When a tracked content "dir/link" is a symlink to > "/etc/motd", it probably makes sense to open("/etc/motd") and read() > it on the working tree side of the diff, and probably even on the > index side of the diff, but what about obtaining contents for > "dir/link" in a year-old commit under --deference mode? I am not > sure if it makes sense to read from the filesystem in such a case. > > I personally am perfectly fine if this "do not compare readlink(2), > but read contents literally" is limited to the --no-index mode. That's a good point. I think I'll stick with the current design, then, since that seems like the least surprising way forward. It also means that we don't read outside of the working tree unless --no-index is in use, which may be beneficial for security purposes. Thanks for a helpful perspective. -- brian m. carlson: Houston, Texas, US OpenPGP: https://keybase.io/bk2204
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