On Tue, Jul 04, 2023 at 12:49:01PM -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote: > So this keeps happening to me - I go to apply a patch I just > downloaded with 'b4', and I do my regular > > git am -s --whitespace 2023<tab> > > and the dang thing doesn't autocomplete., > > The reason it doesn't auto-complete ends up being that my kernel tree > contains some other random stale mbx file from the _previous_ time I > did that, because they effectively get hidden from "git status" etc by > our .gitignore file. > > So then those stale files end up staying around much too long and not > showing up on my radar even though they are just old garbage by the > time I have actually applied them. > > And I always use auto-complete, because those filenames that 'b4' > generate are ridiculously long (for good reason). > > And the auto-complete always fails, because b4 just uses a common > prefix pattern too (again, for a perfectly good reason - I'm not > complaining about b4 here). > > This has been a slight annoyance for a while, but the last time it > happened just a moment ago when I applied David Howells' afs patch > (commit 03275585cabd: "afs: Fix accidental truncation when storing > data" - not that the particular commit matters, I'm just pointing out > how it just happened _again_). > > So I'm really inclined to just revert the commit that added this > pattern: 534066a983df (".gitignore: ignore *.cover and *.mbx"). It's > actively detrimental to my workflow. I don't understand why your completion on "git am" should rely on *tracked* files. From a workflow perspective that makes no sense, as by definition, git am will consume only *untracked* files. Are you sure there isn't something wrong elsewhere in your completion rules, that would make your "git am" complete only with tracked files ? Most likely it should use a rule very similar to what "git add" uses. Just my two cents, Willy