On May 20, 2021 5:06 PM, Emily Shaffer wrote: >To: git@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx >Cc: Emily Shaffer <emilyshaffer@xxxxxxxxxx>; Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@xxxxxxxxx>; Junio C Hamano <gitster@xxxxxxxxx>; >Jeff Hostetler <git@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>; Bagas Sanjaya <bagasdotme@xxxxxxxxx> >Subject: [PATCH v2] tr2: log parent process name > >It can be useful to tell who invoked Git - was it invoked manually by a user via CLI or script? By an IDE? In some cases - like 'repo' tool - >we can influence the source code and set the GIT_TRACE2_PARENT_SID environment variable from the caller process. In 'repo''s case, >that parent SID is manipulated to include the string "repo", which means we can positively identify when Git was invoked by 'repo' tool. >However, identifying parents that way requires both that we know which tools invoke Git and that we have the ability to modify the source >code of those tools. It cannot scale to keep up with the various IDEs and wrappers which use Git, most of which we don't know about. >Learning which tools and wrappers invoke Git, and how, would give us insight to decide where to improve Git's usability and performance. > >Unfortunately, there's no cross-platform reliable way to gather the name of the parent process. If procfs is present, we can use that; >otherwise we will need to discover the name another way. However, the process ID should be sufficient regardless of platform. I like this idea, but there are some platforms where this is unlikely to work. NonStop, in particular, can initiate git - and I frequently do - from a non-POSIX environment where process name is entirely different. In fact, it is something like $ABC (always beginning with a $, which makes life very difficult for shell scripts and screws up GIT_SSH_COMMAND, but I digress). I'm going to need to plug in something very platform-specific to make this work. getppid() always returns 1 in this situation, which is extraordinarily meaningless on the platform and does not represent the actual parent. I will try to put the appropriate compat hooks in once this moves into master but I can't promise it will be particularly efficient at this stage. Regards, Randall