Catalin Marinas wrote: > > The patch history feature was available in StGIT 0.1/0.2 releases > where you should have run a 'stg commit' before 'stg refresh'. The > commit was handling all the history changes, with separate commit > messages and refresh was updating the main commit with 2 parents. I > removed it in 0.3 after some people (I think it was Paul Jackson and > Daniel Barkalow) convinced me that this would make it yet another SCM > interface on top of GIT, which wasn't really my intention.
hmm, I must have misted those threads, I'll try to find and read them. > > The main problem with having multiple parents for a commit object > corresponding to a patch is the upstream merging via 'git pull'. In > general you don't want a gatekeeper to pull the history of your patch > but the patch only. I agree that such history should not be imported into the mainline, but such history would still be very usefull when these patches won't be pushed to mailine immediately. Also, when pushing to mainline, this history can easily be removed by removing the branch/patch/parent files and refreshing (this should off course be automated) > > > The patch below, together with the following script could be used to > > make snapshots of the patch stack (I call it freeze, as I thought snapshot > > was already going to be used for something else): > > 'snapshot' is not yet used for anything and I'm not sure how it is > best to be implemented. I thought about simply saving the current HEAD > into some .git/refs/heads/<file>, without preserving any history for > the patch. A gitk on this file would show the patches as they were on > the time of the snapshot creation. A new snapshot would remove this. > > It might be best for a per-patch history to have a separate file in > <branch>/<patch>/, maybe called freeze, which keeps this history > information. The top one should remain unchanged. Its hash could be > accessed with the 'stg id /freeze' command (implemented > yesterday). This file would only be updated via the 'freeze' command > and its parent would be the previous freeze value. > > Would this be close to what you need? > hmm, not exactly, for example, when reordering the patches (including the top one), I would like to see this in gitk. Or when a patch has been dropped (amongst a lot of patches), it should be easily spotted. But even if the "stg-freeze" would not be incorporated into stgit, would it still be possible to include some sort of extra parents directory. So that the freeze can be implemented on top of stgit? TIA Best regards, Jan - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe git" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html