On Wed, Mar 28, 2012 at 9:38 PM, Myklebust, Trond <Trond.Myklebust@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > When I do the tags/nfs-for-3.4-1, it still gives me that ..BRANCH.NOT.VERIFIED.. crap in the pull message. Hmm. Maybe it does end up only working for a branch in the pre-1.7.9 days. I haven't tested - I don't use old git versions. > Furthermore, it fails to actually push the tag to my upstream repository, meaning that I'm still prone to the 'Linus tried to pull, and the commit wasn't there" syndrome. Well, that's a separate issue. Yes, you obviously need to push first. I would not object to you scripting the "push before pull request". I just object to people using a script that is *worse* than what git actually contains natively to actually generate the pull request. > Could we perhaps set up a best practices webpage/wiki for this sort of thing with a pointer to that webpage in Documentations/SubmittingPatches? That way maintainers would have a source of information for which versions of 'git' that they need to use in order to provide you with the information that you want. The nice signed tag understanding came in 1.7.9. But I actually seriously suggest that all kernel developers use something even more recent than that, since what changes in 1.7.10 (not released yet, but the git 'master' branch is at rc3 now) is the extremely nice "make people actually explain their merges" change. There have been kernel developers that apparently never even noticed that they were creating extraneous merges, so I really encourage everybody to upgrade to current pre-1.7.10 git just so that you are asked to write a nice merge message when you create a merge. That's totally independent of the signed tag issue and the nice pull-request format, though. And it really is *trivial* to use a modern git instead of whatever distro version you have. It's literally: git clone git://github.com/gitster/git cd git make make install all as a *regular*user* (do not 'sudo make install'!). That installs git in your own ~/bin directory, there's no fighting with whatever distro git versions. No need to uninstall things or worry about /usr/local or anything like that. The git master branch is extremely stable, it's not very scary at all to be up-to-date. And it's almost always better than whatever distro version you have, and as seen above it really isn't hard to do. You may need to install a few libraries, but git doesn't really even have very complex dependencies. The two that might bite some people is the need for the curl-devel and expat-devel packages. (If you don't have any development environment at *all*, you need to install gcc, make, zlib-devel, openssl-devel, and gettext, but those tend to be in the development base, so you almost certainly already have them) Obviously you then need to have something like PATH="$(HOME)/bin:$PATH" in your .bashrc to make sure that your own private binaries override the system ones, but hey, that's just a good idea regardless if you are a developer and ever want to use your own programs. Linus -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-nfs" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html