When we resolve a merge between two branches, and it removes a file in the current branch, we notify the person doing the resolve with a big nice notice like
Removing xyzzy which is all well and good. HOWEVER, we also do this when the file was actually removed in the current branch, and we're merging with another branch that didn't have it removed (or, indeed, if the other branch _did_ have it removed, but the common parent was far enough back that the file still existed in there). And that just doesn't make sense. In that case we're not removing anything: the file didn't exist in the branch we're merging into in the first place. So the message just makes people nervous, and makes no sense. This has been around forever, but I never bothered to do anything about it. Until now. The trivial fix is to only talk about removing files if the file existed in the branch we're merging into, but will not exist in the result. Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> --- diff --git a/git-merge-one-file-script b/git-merge-one-file-script --- a/git-merge-one-file-script +++ b/git-merge-one-file-script @@ -21,7 +21,9 @@ case "${1:-.}${2:-.}${3:-.}" in # Deleted in both or deleted in one and unchanged in the other # "$1.." | "$1.$1" | "$1$1.") - echo "Removing $4" + if [ "$2" ]; then + echo "Removing $4" + fi if test -f "$4"; then rm -f -- "$4" fi && - 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