On Wed, Oct 16, 2019 at 01:45:15PM +0100, Philip Oakley wrote: > Signed-off-by: Philip Oakley <philipoakley@iee.email> > --- > > While tring to get to grips with some Git-for-Windows config settings > for testing >4GiB files, I couldn't find any note in the readme about > the test system config file sources. The path of the system config file is determined at compile time, with no way to override it at runtime. Since we don't want external config files influencing our tests, the only choice we have is to ignore the system config file; that's why our test framework sets GIT_CONFIG_NOSYSTEM=1. > Is this the right place for the information, is it complete enough, > and is the default config template special? > > t/README | 3 +++ > 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+) > > diff --git a/t/README b/t/README > index 60d5b77bcc..3daa1fa182 100644 > --- a/t/README > +++ b/t/README > @@ -485,6 +485,9 @@ This test harness library does the following things: > the --root option documented above, and a '.stress-<N>' suffix > appended by the --stress option. > > + - The --global and --system config files are ignored, and > + a basic --local config is created in the tst repository. s/tst/test/ However, note that the global config file isn't really ignored, but different. The path of the global config file depends on the values of the env variables $XDG_CONFIG_HOME and $HOME, and, again, to avoid external influences, our test framework unsets the former, and overrides the latter with HOME="$TRASH_DIRECTORY". IOW the global config file in our tests is '.../t/trash directory.t1234-foo/.gitconfig'. > + > - Defines standard test helper functions for your scripts to > use. These functions are designed to make all scripts behave > consistently when command line arguments --verbose (or -v), > -- > 2.23.0.windows.1.21.g947f504ebe8.dirty >