directory rename detection: partially renamed directory testcase/discussion

Add a long note about why we are not considering "partial directory
renames" for the current directory rename detection implementation.

Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This commit is contained in:
Elijah Newren 2018-04-19 10:57:51 -07:00 committed by Junio C Hamano
parent 21b53733a0
commit de632e4ed3

View File

@ -735,4 +735,119 @@ test_expect_success '3b-check: Avoid implicit rename if involved as source on cu
# of a rename on either side of a merge. # of a rename on either side of a merge.
########################################################################### ###########################################################################
###########################################################################
# SECTION 4: Partially renamed directory; still exists on both sides of merge
#
# What if we were to attempt to do directory rename detection when someone
# "mostly" moved a directory but still left some files around, or,
# equivalently, fully renamed a directory in one commmit and then recreated
# that directory in a later commit adding some new files and then tried to
# merge?
#
# It's hard to divine user intent in these cases, because you can make an
# argument that, depending on the intermediate history of the side being
# merged, that some users will want files in that directory to
# automatically be detected and renamed, while users with a different
# intermediate history wouldn't want that rename to happen.
#
# I think that it is best to simply not have directory rename detection
# apply to such cases. My reasoning for this is four-fold: (1) it's
# easiest for users in general to figure out what happened if we don't
# apply directory rename detection in any such case, (2) it's an easy rule
# to explain ["We don't do directory rename detection if the directory
# still exists on both sides of the merge"], (3) we can get some hairy
# edge/corner cases that would be really confusing and possibly not even
# representable in the index if we were to even try, and [related to 3] (4)
# attempting to resolve this issue of divining user intent by examining
# intermediate history goes against the spirit of three-way merges and is a
# path towards crazy corner cases that are far more complex than what we're
# already dealing with.
#
# Note that the wording of the rule ("We don't do directory rename
# detection if the directory still exists on both sides of the merge.")
# also excludes "renaming" of a directory into a subdirectory of itself
# (e.g. /some/dir/* -> /some/dir/subdir/*). It may be possible to carve
# out an exception for "renaming"-beneath-itself cases without opening
# weird edge/corner cases for other partial directory renames, but for now
# we are keeping the rule simple.
#
# This section contains a test for a partially-renamed-directory case.
###########################################################################
# Testcase 4a, Directory split, with original directory still present
# (Related to testcase 1f)
# Commit O: z/{b,c,d,e}
# Commit A: y/{b,c,d}, z/e
# Commit B: z/{b,c,d,e,f}
# Expected: y/{b,c,d}, z/{e,f}
# NOTE: Even though most files from z moved to y, we don't want f to follow.
test_expect_success '4a-setup: Directory split, with original directory still present' '
test_create_repo 4a &&
(
cd 4a &&
mkdir z &&
echo b >z/b &&
echo c >z/c &&
echo d >z/d &&
echo e >z/e &&
git add z &&
test_tick &&
git commit -m "O" &&
git branch O &&
git branch A &&
git branch B &&
git checkout A &&
mkdir y &&
git mv z/b y/ &&
git mv z/c y/ &&
git mv z/d y/ &&
test_tick &&
git commit -m "A" &&
git checkout B &&
echo f >z/f &&
git add z/f &&
test_tick &&
git commit -m "B"
)
'
test_expect_success '4a-check: Directory split, with original directory still present' '
(
cd 4a &&
git checkout A^0 &&
git merge -s recursive B^0 &&
git ls-files -s >out &&
test_line_count = 5 out &&
git ls-files -u >out &&
test_line_count = 0 out &&
git ls-files -o >out &&
test_line_count = 1 out &&
git rev-parse >actual \
HEAD:y/b HEAD:y/c HEAD:y/d HEAD:z/e HEAD:z/f &&
git rev-parse >expect \
O:z/b O:z/c O:z/d O:z/e B:z/f &&
test_cmp expect actual
)
'
###########################################################################
# Rules suggested by section 4:
#
# Directory-rename-detection should be turned off for any directories (as
# a source for renames) that exist on both sides of the merge. (The "as
# a source for renames" clarification is due to cases like 1c where
# the target directory exists on both sides and we do want the rename
# detection.) But, sadly, see testcase 8b.
###########################################################################
test_done test_done