From: Luke Shumaker <lukeshu@xxxxxxxxxxx> "$*" is for when you want to concatenate the args together, whitespace-separated; and "$@" is for when you want them to be separate strings. There are several places in subtree that erroneously use $@ when concatenating args together into an error message. For instance, if the args are argv[1]="dead" and argv[2]="beef", then the line die "You must provide exactly one revision. Got: '$@'" surely intends to call 'die' with the argument argv[1]="You must provide exactly one revision. Got: 'dead beef'" however, because the line used $@ instead of $*, it will actually call 'die' with the arguments argv[1]="You must provide exactly one revision. Got: 'dead" argv[2]="beef'" This isn't a big deal, because 'die' concatenates its arguments together anyway (using "$*"). But that doesn't change the fact that it was a mistake to use $@ instead of $*, even though in the end $@ still ended up doing the right thing. Signed-off-by: Luke Shumaker <lukeshu@xxxxxxxxxxx> --- v2: - Improve the commit message with quoting and clearer explanation. contrib/subtree/git-subtree.sh | 6 +++--- 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-) diff --git a/contrib/subtree/git-subtree.sh b/contrib/subtree/git-subtree.sh index d7de4b0653..3105eb8033 100755 --- a/contrib/subtree/git-subtree.sh +++ b/contrib/subtree/git-subtree.sh @@ -58,14 +58,14 @@ progress () { assert () { if ! "$@" then - die "assertion failed: " "$@" + die "assertion failed: $*" fi } ensure_single_rev () { if test $# -ne 1 then - die "You must provide exactly one revision. Got: '$@'" + die "You must provide exactly one revision. Got: '$*'" fi } @@ -690,7 +690,7 @@ cmd_add () { cmd_add_repository "$@" else - say >&2 "error: parameters were '$@'" + say >&2 "error: parameters were '$*'" die "Provide either a commit or a repository and commit." fi } -- 2.31.1