On Mon, Nov 26 2018, Duy Nguyen wrote:

> On Mon, Nov 26, 2018 at 10:30 AM Per Lundberg <per.lundb...@hibox.tv> wrote:
>>
>> On 11/13/18 1:22 AM, brian m. carlson wrote:
>> > This is going to totally hose automation.  My last job had files which
>> > might move from tracked to untracked (a file that had become generated),
>> > and long-running CI and build systems would need to be able to check out
>> > one status and switch to the other.  Your proposed change will prevent
>> > those systems from working, whereas they previously did.
>> >
>> > I agree that your proposal would have been a better design originally,
>> > but breaking the way automated systems currently work is probably going
>> > to be a dealbreaker.
>>
>> How about something like this:
>>
>> 1. Introduce a concept with "garbage" files, which git is "permitted to
>> delete" without prompting.
>>
>> 2. Retain the current default, i.e. "ignored files are garbage" for now,
>> making the new behavior _opt in_ to avoid breaking automated
>> systems/existing scripts for anyone. Put the setting for this behind a
>> new core.* config flag.
>>
>> 3. In the plan for version 3.0 (a new major version where some breakage
>> can be tolerable, according to Semantic Versioning), change the default
>> so that "only explicit garbage is garbage". Include very clear notices
>> of this in the release notes. The config flag is retained, but its
>> default changes from true->false or vice versa. People who dislike the
>> new behavior can easily change back to the 2.x semantics.
>
> How does this garbage thing interact with "git clean -x"? My
> interpretation of this flag/attribute is that at version 3.0 by
> default all ignored files are _not_ garbage, so "git clean -x" should
> not remove any of them. Which is weird because most of ignored files
> are like *.o that should be removed.
>
> I also need to mark "precious" on untracked or even tracked files (*).
> Not sure how this "garbage" attribute interacts with that.
>
> (*) I was hoping I could get the idea [1] implemented in somewhat good
> shape before presenting here. But I'm a bit slow on that front. So
> yeah this "precious" on untracked/tracked thingy may be even
> irrelevant if the patch series will be rejected.

I think a garbage (or trashable) flag, if implemented, wouldn't need any
special case in git-clean, i.e. -x would remove all untracked files,
whether ignored or garbage/trashable. That's what my patch to implement
it does:
https://public-inbox.org/git/87zhuf3gs0....@evledraar.gmail.com/

I think that makes sense. Users running "git clean" have "--dry-run" and
unlike "checkout a branch" or "merge this commit" where we'll now shred
data implicitly it's obvious that git-clean is going to shred your data.

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