git-commit-vandalism/git-rebase--am.sh

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remove #!interpreter line from shell libraries In a shell snippet meant to be sourced by other shell scripts, an opening #! line does more harm than good. The harm: - When the shell library is sourced, the interpreter and options from the #! line are not used. Specifying a particular shell can confuse the reader into thinking it is safe for the shell library to rely on idiosyncrasies of that shell. - Using #! instead of a plain comment drops a helpful visual clue that this is a shell library and not a self-contained script. - Tools such as lintian can use a #! line to tell when an installation script has failed by forgetting to set a script executable. This check does not work if shell libraries also start with a #! line. The good: - Text editors notice the #! line and use it for syntax highlighting if you try to edit the installed scripts (without ".sh" suffix) in place. The use of the #! for file type detection is not needed because Git's shell libraries are meant to be edited in source form (with ".sh" suffix). Replace the opening #! lines with comments. This involves tweaking the test harness's valgrind support to find shell libraries by looking for "# " in the first line instead of "#!" (see v1.7.6-rc3~7, 2011-06-17). Suggested by Russ Allbery through lintian. Thanks to Jeff King and Clemens Buchacher for further analysis. Tested by searching for non-executable scripts with #! line: find . -name .git -prune -o -type f -not -executable | while read file do read line <"$file" case $line in '#!'*) echo "$file" ;; esac done The only remaining scripts found are templates for shell scripts (unimplemented.sh, wrap-for-bin.sh) and sample input used in tests (t/t4034/perl/{pre,post}). Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-25 22:03:52 +01:00
# This shell script fragment is sourced by git-rebase to implement
# its default, fast, patch-based, non-interactive mode.
#
# Copyright (c) 2010 Junio C Hamano.
#
case "$action" in
continue)
git am --resolved --resolvemsg="$resolvemsg" \
${gpg_sign_opt:+"$gpg_sign_opt"} &&
move_to_original_branch
return
;;
skip)
git am --skip --resolvemsg="$resolvemsg" &&
move_to_original_branch
return
;;
esac
test -n "$rebase_root" && root_flag=--root
ret=0
if test -n "$keep_empty"
then
# we have to do this the hard way. git format-patch completely squashes
# empty commits and even if it didn't the format doesn't really lend
# itself well to recording empty patches. fortunately, cherry-pick
# makes this easy
git cherry-pick ${gpg_sign_opt:+"$gpg_sign_opt"} --allow-empty "$revisions"
ret=$?
else
rm -f "$GIT_DIR/rebased-patches"
git format-patch -k --stdout --full-index --ignore-if-in-upstream \
--src-prefix=a/ --dst-prefix=b/ --no-renames --no-cover-letter \
$root_flag "$revisions" >"$GIT_DIR/rebased-patches"
ret=$?
if test 0 != $ret
then
rm -f "$GIT_DIR/rebased-patches"
case "$head_name" in
refs/heads/*)
git checkout -q "$head_name"
;;
*)
git checkout -q "$orig_head"
;;
esac
cat >&2 <<-EOF
git encountered an error while preparing the patches to replay
these revisions:
$revisions
As a result, git cannot rebase them.
EOF
return $?
fi
git am $git_am_opt --rebasing --resolvemsg="$resolvemsg" \
${gpg_sign_opt:+"$gpg_sign_opt"} <"$GIT_DIR/rebased-patches"
ret=$?
rm -f "$GIT_DIR/rebased-patches"
fi
if test 0 != $ret
then
test -d "$state_dir" && write_basic_state
return $ret
fi
move_to_original_branch