On Mon, Apr 29, 2019 at 03:06:11PM -0700, Jarosław Honkis via GitGitGadget wrote: > From: =?UTF-8?q?Jaros=C5=82aw=20Honkis?= <yaras6@xxxxxxxxx> > > When a user is asked for credentials there is no need to mask the > username, so the PROMPT_ASKPASS flag on calling credential_ask_one for > login is unnecessary. > > The `credential_ask_one()` function internally uses `git_prompt()` which > in case it is given the flag PROMPT_ASKPASS uses masked input method > instead of git_terminal_prompt, which does not mask user input. This description (and the patch) doesn't make sense to me. The PROMPT_ASKPASS flag is just about whether we would trigger the askpass tool (e.g., if the user does not have a terminal). The PROMPT_ECHO flag is what you want to tell the underlying code that the value can be shown to the user. And that's already set. Now there is a slight issue, which is that the askpass tool has no way for us to tell it to show the contents to the user. There's no way around that without disabling askpass entirely, which I guess is the strategy this patch is trying to do. But in doing so it's going to break anybody who _doesn't_ have a terminal, because now we have no way to prompt there for their username! So I think our options are: 1. Leave it. If people don't want askpass to prompt them, they should not set up askpass. 2. Use another tool besides askpass. I don't know of any askpass implementations that take something like our ECHO flag, but there are lots of other tools. I doubt there's any easy portable solution, though. And anyway, credential helpers are a much more advanced version of this anyway, so I'd probably steer people in that direction. 3. If we really want to try to try to avoid using askpass for usernames we can, but I don't think the logic in this patch is right. If we want to avoid regressing existing cases, then we'd have to first check if there's a usable terminal. And only if _that_ fails, try askpass. And then give up if neither work. I.e., invert the order in git_prompt() when both ASKPASS and ECHO are set. I think I'd still favor option 1 over this, though. Configuring askpass has always overridden the terminal for usernames, and this would change that. I come back to: if you don't want to use askpass, then why are you configuring it? > c->username = credential_ask_one("Username", c, > - PROMPT_ASKPASS|PROMPT_ECHO); > + (getenv("GIT_ASKPASS") ? > + PROMPT_ASKPASS : 0) | > + PROMPT_ECHO); This logic is weird. It still uses askpass if GIT_ASKPASS isn't set. But _doesn't_ if it's set elsewhere, e.g. in core.askPass. Which makes little sense to me. Maybe the intent was that the original user has SSH_ASKPASS set, and that is kicking in (which would also explain why "if you don't like it, don't configure it" didn't work). You can get around that by setting GIT_ASKPASS (or core.askPass) to the empty string (I don't think that's documented anywhere, and I don't recall it being intentional, but it does look like that's how the code works). -Peff