On Tue, Oct 08, 2019 at 03:22:57PM -0400, Joey Hess wrote: > I'm surprised to find that git cat-file --batch, on a Linux system, > strips the \r from an input like "HEAD:foo\r\n" > > It's obvious, of course, that it will remove the newline, and so this > interface cannot be used to query about a filename that, for some > horrible reason[1], contains a newline. But very surprising that it > cannot be used for filename that contains a carriage return, at least > on a non-Windows system. This is likely due to b42ca3dd0f (cat-file: read batch stream with strbuf_getline(), 2015-10-28), and the matching c8aa9fdf5d (strbuf: make strbuf_getline_crlf() global, 2015-10-28). I agree it's a bit surprising (though OTOH, I imagine the old behavior surprised some people in the opposite direction). > The docs for cat-file --batch say the list of objects is separated by > linefeeds. I don't know if updating the docs is the best fix. > (I'd be happy to use a -z if it had one.) Yeah, I agree that a -z option is the best path forward. For non-z input, I'm tempted to say we could unquote entries that start with a double-quote (the match to how we handle filenames in non-z diff output). That would mean breaking compatibility for refnames that start with a quote, though. If we just add a new "-z", that's less disruptive _and_ easier to use. I suspect it's not entirely sufficient for clean input, though. You're not feeding filenames but rather full "object names". I wouldn't be surprised if we mis-parse "$rev:$path" when $path has "@{}" or similar in it. So what you may actually want is some more robust input format that lets you specify the filename as an independent NUL-terminated entity. -Peff