t7415: don't bother creating commit for symlink test

Early versions of the fsck .gitmodules detection code
actually required a tree to be at the root of a commit for
it to be checked for .gitmodules. What we ended up with in
159e7b080b (fsck: detect gitmodules files, 2018-05-02),
though, finds a .gitmodules file in _any_ tree (see that
commit for more discussion).

As a result, there's no need to create a commit in our
tests. Let's drop it in the name of simplicity. And since
that was the only thing referencing $tree, we can pull our
tree creation out of a command substitution.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This commit is contained in:
Jeff King 2018-06-11 04:35:40 -04:00 committed by Junio C Hamano
parent b7b1fca175
commit 431acd2de8

View File

@ -135,13 +135,10 @@ test_expect_success 'fsck detects symlinked .gitmodules file' '
tricky="[foo]bar=true" &&
content=$(git hash-object -w ../.gitmodules) &&
target=$(printf "$tricky" | git hash-object -w --stdin) &&
tree=$(
{
printf "100644 blob $content\t$tricky\n" &&
printf "120000 blob $target\t.gitmodules\n"
} | git mktree
) &&
commit=$(git commit-tree $tree) &&
{
printf "100644 blob $content\t$tricky\n" &&
printf "120000 blob $target\t.gitmodules\n"
} | git mktree &&
# Check not only that we fail, but that it is due to the
# symlink detector; this grep string comes from the config